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Intro to Psychology Study Guide Exam 2

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Detailed class notes/study guide for second half of Psych101 course










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Uploaded on
November 10, 2024
Number of pages
8
Written in
2016/2017
Type
Class notes
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CONSCIOUSNESS: the subjective experience or awareness of internal and external events
Can measure with:
 Use of senses
 Brain activity – recall of pictures and sounds activated corresponding brain areas –
tie between internal activity and brain activity

Levels of Consciousness:
 Differences rely on:
o Is there brain activity? (i.e. brain death)
o Sleep-wake cycles?
o Awareness/purposeful movement
 Minimally conscious state:
o Brain activity
o Sleep-wake cycles
o Awareness
o Locked-in Syndrome: no movement but total awareness
 Vegetative state:
o Brain activity
o Sleep-wake cycles
o No awareness/purposeful movement or communication

Disorders of Awareness:
 Visual neglect: unaware of one side of space, damage to right parietal lobe  ignore
left side of space
o Nothing wrong with vision, about spatial awareness
o If it accompanies a stroke, it will often go away
o Choose non-burning house but not sure why
 Some unconscious awareness occurs even though there is no
explicit/conscious awareness of the left side
 Blind sight: person experiences some blindness with some spared visual capacities
in the absence of visual awareness – damage in the visual cortex
o Detect but cannot see movement

Altered States of Consciousness:

SLEEP:
 circadian rhythms – body temp rises and falls
 Neural mechanisms: pineal gland is triggered by dark light and secretes melatonin
 Stages of sleep:
o Beta Waves: alert, awake, low amplitude, high frequency
o Alpha Waves: drowsy/relaxed, amp and frequency are higher
o Theta Waves: Stage 1 sleep, frequency slows down but amplitude is higher
 Stage 2 sleep – sleep spindles and K-complex keep us asleep
o Delta Waves: slow wave sleep, high amplitude, low frequency, stages 3&4

, o REM Sleep: most similar to awake activity – paradoxical sleep, difficult to
wake, 80% report dreaming, eyes move beneath eyelids
 Typical night includes 4-5 cycles, deepest early in the night, REM sleep increases in
length and frequency as the night progresses




How much sleep do we need?
 Less sleep across life time and smaller proportion of REM sleep
 Infants: 50% of 16-hr sleep is REM sleep
Why do we sleep?
 Repairing and restoring (body and brain)
 Facilitate learning
 Survival value – sleep when you see less outside
o Sleep deprivation: performance and learning takes a hit if you deprive stages
3/4 and takes a HUGE hit when you deprive REM sleep

Altered States of Consciousness: INDUCED:
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