Transcript Figure 5.3

Consciousness
Chapter 7
Meyers Book
Circadian Rhythms
Brain
parts
and
sleep
Biolog
ical
Clock
Time
Change
•
What If The Circadian Clock Is
Upset?
Accidents
– Shift workers and late-night drivers have
more accidents because their sleep-wake
clocks have prepared their body for sleep
• Jet Lag
– State experienced by travelers in which their
internal circadian clock is out of step with the
external time clock at their new location
• Resetting the Clock
– Light Therapy
• use of artificial bright light to reset the
circadian clock
– Melatonin
Source: Data from National Highway Traffic
Administration, 1992.
Figure 5.3
Circadian rhythms and jet lag. Jet lag can be
assessed in a variety of ways. In a study of
people flying between Detroit and London,
which requires a 5-hour time shift, Nicholson
et al. (1986) looked at the time it took travelers
to fall asleep the night before their trip and the
next five nights after their flight. As you can
see, subjects who flew eastward had increased
difficulty falling asleep, whereas subjects who
flew westward showed no evidence of jet lag
on this measure. The data are consistent with
other findings that air travelers generally adjust
more slowly after flying east (which shortens
their day) than after flying west (which
lengthens it). (Data from “Sleep After
Transmeridian Flights,” by A. N. Nicholson,
P.A. Pascoe, M. B. Spencer, B.M. Stone, T.
Roehis & T. Roth, 1986, Lancet, 2, 1201-08.)
Figure 5.4
People traveling east suffer more serious jet lag than people traveling west.
Brain
Waves
First 90 mins of sleep
Fig 5.3
Sleep through life
Sleep comparison
Figure 5.9
Sleep time for mammals varies widely. Animals that are rarely attacked
sleep a lot; those in danger of attack sleep only a few hours. Diet also
relates to sleep. (Based on data from Zepelin & Rechtschaffen, 1974)
Sleep Disorders
• Insomnia is the inability to achieve or maintain sleep
• Many causes for insomnia:
– Stress
– Depression
– Sleeping pills (iatrogenic means physician-caused)
• Some suggestions for treating insomnia
–
–
–
–
–
–
Only use your bed for sleeping
Avoid physical activity prior to sleep
Avoid consumption of caffeine and alcohol before bed
Keep a regular sleep schedule
Go to bed when you are ready(do not force sleep)
Do not sleep during the day if you have insomnia
Figure 5.7
The vicious circle of dependence on sleeping pills. Because of the body’s ability to
develop tolerance to drugs, using sedatives routinely to “cure” insomnia can lead to a
vicious circle of escalating dependency as larger and larger doses of the sedative are
needed to produce the same effect.
Continuous Positive Airway
Pressure
Night
mares
and
night
terrors
Dream
themes
and
cultures
Activation
- Synthesis
theory of
dreaming
Theories of hypnosis
BAC and
behavior
Cocaine and NTransmitters
High School Drug Abuse
Nicotine
and the
body
Drugs
and
tolerance