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States of Consciousness Chapter 9. An Early Pioneer: William James  Teacher of psychology  He was interested in the nature of consciousness.

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Presentation on theme: "States of Consciousness Chapter 9. An Early Pioneer: William James  Teacher of psychology  He was interested in the nature of consciousness."— Presentation transcript:

1 States of Consciousness Chapter 9

2 An Early Pioneer: William James  Teacher of psychology  He was interested in the nature of consciousness

3 Definition of Consciousness State of awareness of ourselves and our world It includes our thoughts, feelings, sensations, and perceptions Levels of awareness

4 Focused Awareness Concentrate only on task at hand

5 Drifting Awareness Daydreaming When not engaged

6 Divided Consciousness The ability to divide consciousness allows us to perform more than one task at a time Dangers

7 Unconsciousness Examples: sleeping and dreaming Definition: lack of awareness of one’s surroundings or loss of consciousness

8 Loss of Consciousness Head trauma Head trauma Surgical anesthesia Surgical anesthesia Coma Coma

9 Altered States of Consciousness DaydreamingMeditationHypnosis Drug use

10 Body Rhythms Module 20: Sleep, Dreams, and Body Rhythms

11 Biological Rhythms  Periodic physiological fluctuations  Fall into three main categories –Circadian Rhythms –Ultradian Rhythms –Infradian Rhythms

12 Circadian Rhythms  Biological rhythms that occur approximately every 24 hours  Example: Sleep- wake cycle

13 Ultradian Rhythms Biological rhythms that occur more than once each day Ex: Stages of sleep throughout the night

14 Infradian Rhythms Biological rhythms that occur once a month or once a season Ex: Women’s menstrual cycle

15 Sleep and Sleep Deficit Module 20: Sleep, Dreams, and Body Rhythms

16 Sleeping and Dreaming  1/3 of our lives we are asleep

17 Reasons for Sleep  Two primary reasons: –Preservation: keep us protected from the dangers of the night –Restoration: recuperate from the wear and tear of the day

18 Sleep Deprivation Decreases immune system functioning Safety issues Contributes to hypertension, impaired concentration, irritability...

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20 Stage 1 Sleep Breathing is slowed. Breathing is slowed. Brain waves become irregular. Brain waves become irregular. It is easy to wake the person, who will insist they are not asleep. It is easy to wake the person, who will insist they are not asleep. Person will report they have dreamlike sensations, such as falling. Person will report they have dreamlike sensations, such as falling.

21 EEG

22 Stage 2 Sleep  Brain wave cycle slows.  EEG spindles (small brain wave bursts) develop.  First time through stage 2 last about 20 minutes.

23 Stages 3 and 4 Sleep  Increase in delta waves (large and slow waves per second)  First time through stage 4 is about 30 minutes

24 REM Sleep Stages 1 - 4 considered N-REM (non-REM sleep) Rapid eye movement (REM Sleep) - eyes move quickly back and forth Most dreaming occurs in REM sleep

25 Paradoxical Sleep During REM sleep brain wave patterns are similar to when a person is awake During REM sleep brain wave patterns are similar to when a person is awake

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27 Why Do We Dream? Module 20: Sleep, Dreams, and Body Rhythms

28 Freud and Dreams  Dreams = wish fulfillment  The road to the unconscious  Manifest versus latent

29 Information-Processing Theory  Dreams serve an important memory- related function by sorting and sifting through the day’s experiences  Research suggests REM sleep helps memory storage.

30 Physiological Function Theory  Neural activity during REM sleep provides periodic stimulation of the brain.

31 Activation-Synthesis Theory  Dreams are the mind’s attempt to make sense of random neural firings in the brain as one sleeps.

32 Insomnia Insomnia affects 15% of the adult population 3 types: 1. Trouble getting to sleep 2. Trouble staying asleep 3. Trouble returning to sleep after awakening

33 Increase your quality of sleep: Don’t consume caffeine Get up at the same time every morning Avoid nighttime activities that rile you up Try not to worry when you can’t get to sleep.

34 Sleep Apnea  Stop breathing as many as 500 times a night  Overly thick palate or enlarged tonsils that block a person’s airways  Male, overweight, over 40 years old  Risks: hypertension, high blood pressure

35 http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/d ci/Diseases/SleepApnea/SleepA pnea_WhatIs.html

36 Narcolepsy A mirror image of insomnia Rapid onset of REM sleep May last up to 15 minutes Dangers

37 Sleepwalking More common among children than adults Persistent sleepwalking is an indication of a sleep disorder Occurs in deep sleep

38 Nightmare Disorder Disturbing nightmares that are very vivid and intense Common themes: falling, fleeing REM sleep

39 Night Terrors  More intense than nightmares  They occur in deep sleep, not REM sleep  Affects boys and men more

40 Other Sleep Disorders  Bruxism – teeth grinding  Enuresis – bed wetting  Myoclonus – sudden jerk of a body part occurring during stage 1 sleep –Everyone has occasional episodes of myoclonus

41 What is Hypnosis? Module 21: Hypnosis

42  A form of altered consciousness in which a person becomes highly suggestible  Open to commands What Is Hypnosis?

43 Inducing a Trance Braid method Eye method Machine method

44 Social Influence Theory The theory that powerful social influence can produce hypnosis Ex. Stages with a group of people

45 Divided Consciousness During hypnosis our consciousness splits so that one aspect of consciousness is not aware of the role of the other parts playing

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47 Age Regression Under hypnosis, the supposed ability to remember earlier periods of time in one’s life Under hypnosis, the supposed ability to remember earlier periods of time in one’s life Psychologists consider age regression demonstrations unreliable. Psychologists consider age regression demonstrations unreliable.


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