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Module 7

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Module 7 Sleep and Dreams – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Module 7


1
Module 7
  • Sleep and Dreams

2
CONTINUUM OF CONCIOUSNESS
  • Different states
  • Consciousness
  • refers to different levels of awareness of ones
    thoughts and feelings
  • Continuum of consciousness
  • refers to a wide range of experiences, from being
    acutely aware and alert to being totally unaware
    and unresponsive

3
CONTINUUM OF CONCIOUSNESS (CONT.)
  • Different states
  • Controlled processes
  • activities that require full awareness, alertness
    and concentration to reach some goal
  • Automatic processes
  • activities that require little awareness, take
    minimal attention, and do not interfere with
    other ongoing activities
  • Daydreaming
  • activity that requires low level of awareness,
    often occurs during automatic processes, and
    involves fantasizing or dreaming while awake

4
CONTINUUM OF CONCIOUSNESS (CONT.)
  • Different states
  • altered states
  • result from using any number of procedures, such
    as meditation, psychoactive drugs, hypnosis, or
    sleep deprivation, to produce an awareness that
    differs from normal consciousness

5
CONTINUUM OF CONCIOUSNESS (CONT.)
  • Different states
  • Sleep and dreams
  • Sleep
  • consists of five stages that involve different
    levels of awareness, consciousness, and
    responsiveness
  • Dreaming
  • unique state of consciousness in which we are
    asleep but experience a variety of astonishing
    visual, auditory, and tactile images often
    connected in strange ways and often in color

6
CONTINUUM OF CONCIOUSNESS (CONT.)
  • Unconscious and Implicit Memory
  • Freuds theory, when we are faced with very
    threatening wishes or desires, especially if they
    are sexual or aggressive
  • defend self-esteem by placing these thoughts in
    the unconscious
  • cannot voluntarily recall unconscious thoughts
  • Implicit or Nondeclarative Memory
  • learning without awareness
  • occurs in emotional situations or in acquiring
    habits

7
CONTINUUM OF CONCIOUSNESS (CONT.)
  • Unconscious
  • can result from disease, trauma, a blow to the
    head, or general medical anesthesia
  • results in total lack of sensory awareness and
    complete loss of responsiveness to ones
    environment

8
RHYTHMS OF SLEEPING WAKING
  • Biological clocks
  • biological clocks are internal timing devices
    that are genetically set to regulate various
    physiological responses for different periods of
    time
  • Circadian rhythm
  • refers to a biological clock that is genetically
    programmed to regulate physiological responses
    within a time period of 24 hours

9
RHYTHMS OF SLEEPING WAKING (CONT.)
  • Location of biological clocks
  • Suprachiasmatic nucleus
  • part of hypothalamus
  • lies in the lower middle of the brain
  • regulates sleep-wake cycle
  • highly responsive to change in light

10
RHYTHMS OF SLEEPING WAKING (CONT.)
11
RHYTHMS OF SLEEPING WAKING (CONT.)
  • Location of biological clocks
  • interval timing clock
  • can be started and stopped like a stopwatch
  • gauges the passage of seconds, minutes, or hours
  • helps creatures time their movements, such as
    knowing when to start or stop doing some activity
  • located in the basal ganglia
  • food-entrainable circadian clock
  • midnight snack clock
  • regulates eating patterns in people and animals
  • might be responsible for late night eating
  • obese people might have an abnormality in their
    clock

12
RHYTHMS OF SLEEPING WAKING (CONT.)
  • Circadian problems and treatments
  • accidents
  • jet lag
  • resetting clock
  • melatonin

13
WORLD OF SLEEP
  • Stages of sleep
  • distinctive changes in the electrical activity of
    the brain and accompanying physiological
    responses of the body that occur as you pass
    through different phases of sleep
  • Alpha stage
  • feeling of being relaxed and drowsy, usually with
    the eyes closed

14
WORLD OF SLEEP (CONT.)
  • Non-REM sleep
  • where you spend approximately 80 of your sleep
    time
  • divided into 4 stages
  • identified by particular pattern of brain waves
    and physiological responses
  • begin with stage 1 and gradually enter stages 2,
    3, and 4

15
WORLD OF SLEEP (CONT.)
  • Non-REM sleep
  • Stage 1 sleep
  • transition from wakefulness to sleep that lasts
    1-7 minutes
  • gradually lose responsiveness to stimuli and
    experience drifting thoughts and images
  • presence of theta waves

16
WORLD OF SLEEP (CONT.)
  • Non-REM sleep
  • Stage 2 sleep
  • beginning of what we know as sleep
  • high-frequency bursts of brain activity called
    sleep spindles
  • muscle tension, body temperature and heart rate
    gradually decrease
  • more difficult to be awakened

17
WORLD OF SLEEP (CONT.)
  • Non-REM sleep
  • Stages 3 and 4
  • also called slow wave or delta sleep
  • waves of very high amplitude and very low
    frequency (delta waves)
  • stage 4 is often considered the deepest stage of
    sleep
  • most difficult to be awakened from
  • heart rate, respiration, temperature, and blood
    flow to the brain are reduced
  • marked secretion of growth hormone (GH),
  • controls levels of metabolism, physical growth,
    and brain development

18
WORLD OF SLEEP (CONT.)
  • REM sleep
  • makes up the remaining 20 of your sleep time
  • stands for rapid eye movement
  • eyes move rapidly back and forth behind closed
    lids
  • pass into REM sleep about five or six times
    throughout the night with about 30 to 90 minutes
    between periods
  • REM sleep remains for about 15 to 45 minutes then
    passes into non-REM sleep

19
WORLD OF SLEEP (CONT.)
20
QUESTIONS ABOUT SLEEP
  • According to a national survey
  • 16 of adults sleep less than 6 hours
  • 24 sleep 6-6.9 hours
  • 31 sleep 7-7.9 hours
  • 26 sleep 8 or more hours
  • average 6.9 hours a night

21
QUESTIONS ABOUT SLEEP
  • Why do I sleep?
  • repair theory
  • activities during the day deplete key factors in
    our brain or body that are replenished or
    repaired by sleep
  • primarily a restorative process
  • adaptive theory
  • sleep evolved because it prevented early humans
    and animals from wasting energy and exposing
    themselves to the dangers of nocturnal predators

22
WORLD OF DREAMS
  • Theories of dream interpretation
  • Freuds theory of dream interpretation
  • we have a censor that protects us from
    realizing threatening and unconscious desires or
    wishes, especially those involving sex or
    aggression
  • censor protects us from threatening thoughts by
    transforming our secret, guilt-ridden and
    anxiety-provoking desires into harmless symbols
    that appear in our dreams and do not disturb our
    sleep or conscious thoughts

23
WORLD OF DREAMS (CONT.)
  • Theories of dream interpretation
  • Extensions of Waking Life Theory
  • dreams reflect the same thoughts, fears,
    concerns, problems, and emotions that we have
    when awake
  • Activation-Synthesis Theory
  • dreaming occurs because brain areas that provide
    reasoned cognitive control during the waking
    state are shut down
  • sleeping brain is stimulated by different
    chemical and neural influences that result in
    hallucinations, delusions, high emotions, and
    bizarre thought patterns that we call dreams

24
WORLD OF DREAMS (CONT.)
  • Typical dreams
  • What do people dream about?
  • several characters
  • involve motion
  • take place indoors more often than out
  • visual sensation, but rarely sensations of taste,
    smell, or pain
  • seem bizarre, may include flying or falling
    without injury
  • may be recurrent (dreams of being threatened,
    pursued, or trying to hide)

25
WORLD OF DREAMS (CONT.)
  • Typical dreams
  • involve emotions of anxiety or fear rather than
    joy or happiness
  • rarely involve sexual encounters and are almost
    never about sexual intercourse
  • rarely can we control or dream about something we
    intend to dream about
  • dreams usually have visual imagery and are in
    color in sighted people
  • blind people from birth, dream in tactile,
    olfactory, or gustatory (taste), not visual

26
APPLICATION SLEEP PROBLEMS TREATMENTS
  • Insomnia
  • difficulties in either going to sleep or staying
    asleep through the night
  • associated with daytime complaints
  • fatigue
  • impairment of concentration
  • memory difficulty
  • lack of well-being

27
APPLICATION SLEEP PROBLEMS TREATMENTS (CONT.)
  • Nondrug treatment
  • go to bed only when sleepy
  • put light out immediately
  • do not read or watch TV
  • if not asleep in 20 minutes, get out of bed and
    relax in another room until tired again
  • repeat step 4 as often as required
  • set alarm for same time each morning
  • do not nap during the day
  • follow program rigidly for several weeks
  • Drug treatment

28
APPLICATION SLEEP PROBLEMS TREATMENTS (CONT.)
  • Drug treatment
  • Benzodiazepines (Dalmane, Xanax, Restoril)
  • reduce anxiety, worry, and stress
  • effective in moderate dosages in short term (2-4
    weeks) treatment
  • prolonged use in higher dosages may lead to
    dependence
  • Nonbenzodiazepines (Ambien, Sonata, Lunesta)
  • rapidly becoming popular
  • fast acting
  • reduce daytime drowsiness
  • fewer cognitive side effects
  • less likely to lead to dependence

29
APPLICATION SLEEP PROBLEMS TREATMENTS (CONT.)
  • Sleep Apnea
  • repeated periods during sleep when a person stops
    breathing for 10 seconds or longer
  • may repeatedly stop breathing, momentarily awake,
    and then resume sleep
  • results in insomnia, and exhaustion during the
    day
  • Narcolepsy
  • chronic disorder that is marked by excessive
    sleepiness
  • form of sleep attacks or short periods of sleep
    throughout the day
  • accompanied by brief periods of REM sleep and
    loss of muscle control (cataplexy)
  • triggered by emotional change

30
APPLICATION SLEEP PROBLEMS TREATMENTS (CONT.)
  • Night Terrors
  • occur in stage 3 or 4 (delta sleep)
  • frightening experiences that often start with a
    piercing scream
  • followed by sudden awakening in a fearful state
    with rapid breathing and increased heart rate
  • usually no memory of experience in the morning
  • Nightmares
  • occur during REM sleep
  • very frightening and anxiety-producing images
    occur
  • involve great danger
  • upon awakening, person can describe nightmare in
    great detail

31
APPLICATION SLEEP PROBLEMS TREATMENTS (CONT.)
  • Sleepwalking
  • occurs in stage 3 or 4 (delta sleep)
  • getting up and walking while literally sound
    asleep
  • have poor coordination
  • clumsy but can avoid objects
  • can engage in limited conversation
  • no memory of sleepwalking
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