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States of Consciousness

States of Consciousness. Consciousness. Is our awareness of ourselves and our environment. Allows one to think and plan Enables concentration Jake doesn’t agree with this formulation…. Waking Consciousness.

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States of Consciousness

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  1. States of Consciousness

  2. Consciousness • Is our awareness of ourselves and our environment. • Allows one to think and plan • Enables concentration • Jake doesn’t agree with this formulation…

  3. Waking Consciousness • Selective Attention – the limited aspect of experience that we focus our attention on. • Dichotomoue hearing; cocktail party effect • Can you sing along with the radio when you drive? • Daydreams & Fantasies – • Bad when escapist and counterproductive • Adaptive when relieving boredom, problem solving, or a coping method.

  4. Sleep and Dreams • Circadian Rythyms – biological clock set for 24 hour period. • Melatonin – produced in darkness, and slows biological activity.

  5. Sleep Stages • Awake and relaxed – alpha waves • Stage 1 Sleep – ca. 5 min, hallucinations (perception w/o sensation) • Stage 2 – ca. 20 min, sleep spindles (bursts of brainwave activity) • Stage 3 – transition, a few minutes • Stage 4 – delta waves • Stages 3 & 4 are slow wave sleep and are difficult to awaken people from • REM – paradoxical sleep

  6. REM • After about an hour of sleep return to stage 1: REM • Lasts about 10 minutes • Cycle repeats every 90 minutes • Genital arousal ‘always’ occurs • Brainstem blocks messages to muscles

  7. Why Sleep? • Growth hormone released • Low sleep: poor attention • Tissue repair – lowers body temperature • So we don’t run into (or off of) stuff in the dark

  8. Sleep Disorders • Insomnia – persistent problems falling or staying asleep • Sleep Apnea – stop breathing during night; snoring • Narcolepsy – spontaneously fall asleep • Night terrors – occur during stage 4 sleep, not REM

  9. Dreams • Might put together information from the day (manifest content: the storyline) • Might be subconscious desires, conflicts that would be unsafe to express otherwise (latent content) • Freud’s interpretation of dreams… (1900) • REM rebound – when deprived of REM you will return more and more rapidly to REM sleep

  10. Hypnosis • Facts & Falsehoods – you cannot recall more accurately in hypnosis • you can separate awareness • some people are more hypnotizeable than others • can alleviate pain • Hypnosis may be an authority effect – remember Stanley Milgram?

  11. Drugs • Dependence & Addiction • Tolerance – with use effects diminish, so you gotta take more to get the same effect • Withdrawal – pain after cessation of administration • Physical dependence – characterized by withdrawal • Psychological dependence – drug becomes an important part of person’s life, often as a way of relieving negative emotions

  12. Psychoactive Drugs • Depressants (alcohol, barbiturates, opiates) – reduce neural activity & slow body functions • Stimulants (caffeine, nicotine, amphetamines, nose candy) – excite neural activity & speed up body functions • Hallucinogens (weed, LSD, shrooms, X) – distort perception & evoke sensory images w/o input from environment • X is real bad! – triggers dopamine release (reinforcing use); triggers release of serotonin & prevents reuptake • X can break your brain. Serotonin receptors can be damaged, which can result in depressed mood, interference in circadian rhythms, suppress immune system, inhibit memory & cognitive functions

  13. Influences on Drug Use • Genetics • Culture

  14. NDE • Near Death Experience (more accurately, “I came back from the dead” experience) • About 1/3 people who die and come back experience NDEs, not everyone • Stable across cultures and time • Explained by oxygen deprivation • People who experience isolation/extreme conditions also have ‘mystic experiences’

  15. Monism or Dualism • Monism – there is no mind, just brain • Dualism – mind and brain are distinct (but not necessarily separate) • Both have problems that are very difficult to address, but most biopsychologists take a monistic stance.

  16. References • Myers, D. (2005). Exploring Psychology (6th ed.). New York: Worth Publishers. • www.crystalinks.com/ reality.html

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