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States of Consciousness. Consciousness. Consciousness—an organism’s awareness of its own self and surroundings Alternate State of Consciousness (ASC)—A mental state other than ordinary waking consciousness, found during sleep, dreaming, psychoactive drug use, hypnosis, and so on.
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Consciousness • Consciousness—an organism’s awareness of its own self and surroundings • Alternate State of Consciousness (ASC)—A mental state other than ordinary waking consciousness, found during sleep, dreaming, psychoactive drug use, hypnosis, and so on
Stream of Consciousness • Direction—Choices from our Selective Attention • Depth—Level of alertness
Processes—Levels of Awareness • Controlled—mental activities requiring focused attention that generally interfere with other ongoing activities • Automatic—Mental activities requiring minimal attention and having little impact on other activities
Sleep and Dreams • Circadian Rhythms (from the Latin circa “about” and diem “day”)—Biological changes that occur on a 24-hour cycle • The hormone melatonin is related to the circadian rhythms and sleep
Critical Thinking • Examine the myth “Dreaming of dying can be fatal” • Discuss critically why we can know this is a myth rather than scientific fact.
Sleep Deprivation • Body needs time to restore itself • Mind needs time to reprocess information • Mood alterations, loss of ability to function, death
Stages of Sleep • Four stages of NREM (non-REM) sleep—cycles last approximately 90 minutes • REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep—a stage of sleep marked by rapid eye movements, high-frequency brain waves, paralysis of large muscles and dreaming.
The need for sleep • Repair/Restoration Theory—Sleep serves a recuperative function, allowing organisms to repair or replenish key factors. • Evolutionary/Circadian Theory—As a part of circadian rhythms, sleep evolved to conserve energy and as protection from predators.
Dreams—Psychoanalytic View • According to Freud • Manifest Content—the surface content of a dream, which contains dream symbols that distort and disguise the dream’s true meaning • Latent Content—The true, unconscious meaning of a dream
Dreams—Biological View • Hobson • Activation-Synthesis Hypothesis—dreams are by-products of random stimulation of brain cells; the brain attempts to combine (or synthesize) this spontaneous activity into coherent patterns, known as dreams
Dreams—Cognitive View • Dreams are and extension of everyday life—another type of information processing. • Dreams are the brain’s way of processing, assimilating and updating information • REM sleep increases following stress and intense learning periods (anxiety dreams, etc.)
Sleep Disorders • Dyssomnias • Insomnia—persistent problems falling asleep, staying asleep or awakening too early (related—hypersomnia) • Sleep apnea—repeated interruption of breathing during sleep because air passages to the lungs are physically blocked • Narcolepsy—sudden and irresistible onsets of sleep during normal waking hours (narco=“numbness” and lepsy=“siezure”)
Sleep Disorders • Parasomnias—abnormal sleep disturbances • Nightmares—anxiety-arousing dreams generally occurring near the end of the sleep cycle, during REM sleep • Night Terrors—abrupt awakenings from NREM sleep accompanied by intense physiological arousal and feelings of panic.
Drugs and ASCs • Psychoactive Drugs—Chemicals that change conscious awareness, mood, or perception
Abuse, Dependence and Addiction • Substance Abuse—use of a substance that causes emotional or physical harm to the user or others • Substance Abuse • Maladaptive substance use with clinically significant impairment as manifested by at least one of the following within any 1-year period: • Failure to fulfill major role obligations at work, school, or home • Recurrent use when physically hazardous • Recurrent legal problems • Continued use despite recurrent social or interpersonal problems • Patient has never met criteria for Dependence
Substance Dependence • Psychological Dependence—desire or craving to achieve the effects produced by the drug • Physical Dependence—Bodily processes have been modified by repeated use of a drug that continued use is required to prevent withdrawal symptoms
Tolerance, Withdrawal • Tolerance—decreased sensitivity to a drug brought on by its continuous use • Withdrawal—Discomfort and distress, including physical pain and intense cravings, experienced after stopping the use of addictive drugs
Substance Dependence (DSM-IV) • Substance Dependence • Maladaptive substance use with clinically significant impairment as manifested by at least three of the following within any 1-year period: • Tolerance • Withdrawal • Taken in greater amounts or over longer time course than intended
DSM-IV Continued • Substance Dependence • Desire or unsuccessful attempts to cut down or control use • Great deal of time spent obtaining, using or recovering from drug • Social, occupational, or recreational activities give up or reduced • Continued use despite knowledge of physical or psychological problem that is likely to have been caused or exacerbated by the substance
Addiction • A broad term describing a compulsion to use a specific drug or engage in a certain activity
Drug Guide 101 • Depressants • Stimulants • Opiates • Hallucinogens
Depressants • Depressants—psychoactive drugs that act on the central nervous system to suppress or slow bodily processes and reduce overall responsiveness • Includes: Alcohol, barbiturates (mathaqualone—”quaalude”), anti-anxiety drugs (Valium, Xanax), Rohypnol (roofies), etc.
Stimulants • Drugs that act on the brain and nervous system to increase their overall activity and general responsiveness • Includes: nicotine, caffeine, Ritalin, cocaine in all its forms, amphetamines, methamphetamines, Ecstasy, etc.
Opiates • Drugs derived from opium that function as an analgesic or pain reliever. • Includes: Morphine, heroin, street methadone, opium, codeine, hydrocodone (Vicodin, Lortab), oxycodone (Percocet, Oxycontin), Demerol, Darvocet, etc.
Hallucinogens • Drugs that produce sensory or perceptual distortions called hallucinations. • Includes: LSD (acid), mescaline (peyote), mushrooms, Ketamine (special K), PCP (angel dust), marijuana (referred to as a “pseudo-hallucinogenic drug”)
How Drugs Work • Agonists • Antagonists • Neurotransmitters (review)
Why People Use and Abuse Drugs • Environmental Factors • TV, entertainment, reference groups, family systems • Socio-cultural background • Biological Factors • Natural reinforcers (eating, drinking, sex) stimulate the brain’s reward system • Withdrawal factors
Other routes to ASCs • Daydreams and fantasies • Dissociation • Hypnosis • Common Myths • Therapeutic Uses • Meditation