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Chapter 7 STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS

States of Consciousness

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States of Consciousness. Chapter 7. An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge. What does the film say about four characteristics of Consciousness? Its Personal Its Changing Its Selective Its Continuous. Waking Consciousness. The nature and significance of Consciousness in Psychology. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 7STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS

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What does the film say about four characteristics of Consciousness? Its Personal Its Changing Its Selective Its Continuous

AN OCCURRENCE AT OWL CREEK BRIDGE

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WAKING CONSCIOUSNESS

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Psychology began as the study of consciousness Scientifically difficult to

study Psychologists turned to

studying behavior By 1950’s it becomes known

as the Science of BehaviorAdvances in technology

Made possible to relate brain activity to various mental states Waking, sleeping, and

dreaming

THE NATURE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS IN PSYCHOLOGY

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Conscious information processingEnables us to exert voluntary control and to communicate our mental states to others Slow and limited capacity

Beneath the surfaceFaster subconscious processing is taking place.

Example: First meeting someone

CONTRAST CONSCIOUSNESS AND SUBCONSCIOUS INFORMATION

PROCESSING

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Nearly everyone has day dreams or waking fantasies Young adults spend more

time daydreaming Also admit to more sexual

fantasiesMost daydreams

involve familiar details Can also be adaptive

Prepare for future events Substitute for impulsive

behavior

DAYDREAMS AND FANTASIES

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SLEEP AND DREAMS

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Varying periods of time cause psychological fluctuations in our biological rhythms Annual cycle

People experience seasonal variations in appetite, sleep length, and moods

Menstrual Cycle in Females Causes fluctuation in mood

Male 24 Hr. Cycle Varying alertness, body

temp, and hormone secretion

BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS

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Our daily schedule or waking and sleep is based on a biological clock called then circadian rhythm

Each nights sleep has its own rhythmFrom Stage 1 to Stage 4 and back up REM sleep (Stage 5)

CYCLICAL NATURE OF SLEEP

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STAGES OF SLEEP

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10-15 percent of adults complain about insomnia

Other disorders Narcolepsy

Periodic, overwhelming sleepiness

Sleep Apnea Intermittently stop

breathing during sleep Night Terrors

Extreme paranoia or terror in Stage 1

Sleepwalking Name says it all

SLEEP DISORDERS

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Most are ordinary events that relate to everyday experiences

Freud Dreams manifest content is

censored latent contentNew ideas about dreams

Help process and fix information in our memory

Serve a physiological function

Neural activates areas of the brain that processes visual images

DREAMS

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HYPNOSIS

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A social interaction in which the hypnotist suggests to a subject that certain perceptions, feelings, thoughts or behaviors will occur

Afterward subjects may experience posthypnotic amnesia

WHAT IS IT?

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Subjects under hypnosis Reliving childhood

experiences (age regression)

Recall Although hypnotist beliefs

may interfere Temporarily therapeutic

(posthypnotic suggestion) Pain Relief

Explained through dissociation

**Can not be made to do things against their will

BEHAVIOR OF HYPNOTIZED PEOPLE

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Not altered state argument Hypnosis is a by-product of

normal social and cognitive processes Behaviors produced can be done

without hypnosis Acting the role

Is an altered state argument Subjects carry out behaviors

on cue Pain relief and hallucenations

Ernest Hilgard: a hidden observer explains a subjects awareness of experiences that go unreported during hypnosis

HYPNOSIS AN ALTERED STATE OF CONSCIOUSNESS?

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DRUGS AND CONSCIOUSNESS

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DRUG DEPENDENCE

Psychoactive DrugsChemicals that change perceptions and moods Continued use creates

tolerance Cessation can produce

effects of withdrawal Pain of withdraw

indicates physical dependence

Psychological Dependence can occur especially with stress relieving drugs

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Medical drugs, like pain killers, are powerfully addictive

Addictions can only be overcome through treatment

Addiction can extend to a large spectrum of pleasure seeking behaviors Overeating, excerise,

sex, surfing the net

THREE MYTHS OF DRUG ADDICTION

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Depressants act by depressing neural functioningOffer pleasures but at the cost of impaired memory, self-awareness, and other physical consequences

Depressants:Alcholol, barbituates, opiates (vicodin)

DRUG TYPES: DEPRESSANTS

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Stimulants act by stimulating neural functioningAct at the synapses by influencing the brains neurotransmitters

StimulantsNicotine, Caffeine, cocaine, meth, any amphetamine

DRUG TYPES: STIMULANTS

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Hallucinogens distort the user’s judgment of time and can alter sensations and perceptions

Hallucinogens Marijuana (THC), LSD,

Peyote, mushrooms Ecstasy: Both a

stimulant and hallucinogen

DRUG TYPES: HALLUCINOGENS

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NEAR-DEATH EXPERIENCE

1/3 of those who survive a brush with death recall a near-death experience Out-of-body sensations,

visions of tunnels, bright lights, feelings of love, joy, peace

Dualists Believe mind and body are

distinct entitiesMonists

Believe these are hallucinations and just the brain under stress