Psych Chapter 7 Test
How are psychoactive drugs absorbed and used by the body?
- carried by the blood and target tissues in the body -drugs encounter capillaries and absorb into blood -drugs act as neurotransmitters (send their own chemical messages)
Why might marijuana's effects vary from person to person, and what effects are generally the same?
-most people experience augmented sense and heightened emotions -reaction depends on the setting and your part with marijuana
What is REM Sleep?
A stage of sleep characterized by rapid eye movements, a high level of brain activity, a deep relaxation of the muscles, and dreaming
What is hypnosis?
A state of consciousness resulting from a narrowed focus of attention and characterized by heightened suggestability
What drugs are depressants?
Alcohol
What is a pseudoscientific claim?
Any assertion that isn't based on science, even though in some circumstances attempts are made to appear scientific (appears to be scientific but isn't)
What is consciousness?
Awareness of yourself and your environment
What drugs are tranquilizers?
Barbiturates, benzodiazepines (Valium/Xanax)
What happens during Stage II sleep?
Brain wave cycle slows, first time through stage II lasts about 20 minutes
What is the formal name for teeth grinding?
Bruxism
What drugs are stimulants?
Caffeine, amphetamines, cocaine
How do opiates effect behavior?
Decrease pain, decrease attention to real world, unpleasant withdrawal effects as drugs wear off
What are effects of sleep deprivation?
Decreases efficiency in immune system, safety and accident issues, contributes to hypertension, impaired concentrations, irritability, etc.
What device is used to aid in sleep study? It records electrical activity in the brain.
EEG
What is the formal term for bed wetting?
Enuresis
What does mindful meditation consist of?
Focusing on the present
What do some people think that dreams contain?
Hidden meanings
What drugs are hallucinogens?
LSD, mescaline
Biofeedback uses what to show people the very subtle, moment-to-moment changes in their bodies?
Machines
How does the hypothalamus control sleep?
Monitors changes in light or dark environments, changes levels of hormones in the body
What is the sudden jerk of a body part during stage I sleep called?
Myoclonus (everyone has episodes of this)
How does a stimulant like coffee differ from a designer drug like methamphetamine?
Natural stimulants increase energy and alertness while synthetic stimulants like designer drugs do that but the side effects include paranoia, violence, schizophrenia, and convulsions
Are the emotions in dreams normally positive or negative?
Negative
Ernest Hilgard supports what theory?
Neodissociation theory
Negative emotions in dreams can trigger what?
Nightmares
What is REM sleep also called?
Paradoxical sleep (because brain wave patterns are similar to when a person is awake, pulse and breathing quicken, muscle movement blocked)
What are hallucinations?
Perceptions that have no direct external cause
What are the two primary reasons for sleep?
Preservation: keep us protected from dangers of the night Restoration: recuperate from the wear and tear of the day
What kind of sleep do people need to function normally?
REM and NREM
What do opiates do?
Reduce pain, cause euphoria, and constipation -regular use can lead to addiction
How do depressants effect behavior?
Relaxants, relieve inhibitions, impair memory and judgment
How do tranquilizers effect behavior?
Relieve anxiety, relax muscles, induce sleep
What does transcendental meditation consist of?
Repeating a mantra
What is narcolepsy?
Sleep disorder characterized by uncontrollable sleep attacks
What are night terrors?
Sleep disruptions that occur during Stage IV sleep, involving screaming, panic, or confusion
What is the formal name for sleep walking?
Somnambulism
What is NREM sleep?
Stages I-IV
Some researchers think that hypnosis is not a special state of consciousness, but only the result of what?
Suggestibility
What caused the drop in use and abuse of barbiturates?
The Comprehensive Drug Abuse Protection and Control Act of 1970
What is insomnia?
The failure to get enough sleep at night in order to feel rested the next day
What is meditation?
The focusing of attention to clear one's mind and produce relaxation
What is biofeedback?
The process of learning to control bodily states with the help of machines monitoring the states to be controlled
What is the Divided Consciousness Theory?
Theory that during hypnosis our consciousness splits so that one aspect of consciousness is not aware of the role that other parts are playing
What is the Social Influence Theory?
Theory that powerful social influences produce a state of hypnosis
What are some of the reasons that a depressant like alcohol is so often abused?
They are generally easy to find, people lose their inhibitions, feel more social, encouraged by advertisements, society and traditions support alcohol use
What happens to someone during hypnosis?
They are highly receptive to certain internal and external stimuli
How might opiates be used medicinally, but why can using them be medically dangerous?
They reduce pain, but are dangerous because of the euphoria they cause after regular use
What did Nathaniel Kleitman believe about dreams?
They serve no purpose
Why do researchers think that people's hallucinations are often similar?
They think they're similar because of the way the drugs effect the brain
How long has meditation been practiced?
Thousands of years
REM sleep is called ____________ because the brain waves resemble those of a person who is ____________
active, awake
Internal ____________________ regulate the body's sleep-wakefulness cycle, but external forces like the environment and the ______________ control it
biological clock, 24 hour day
As you begin to fall asleep your ________________ and _____________ decrease, while your _______________ becomes slow and even
body temperature, pulse rate, breathing
What is Stage I sleep?
breathing slows, brain waves become irregular, easy to wake the person, person will probably say they weren't asleep, rarely lasts longer than 5 minutes
What purpose does REM sleep seem to serve?
builds efficient learning and memory processes
How do hallucinogens effect behavior?
cause hallucinations, sensory distortions, and occasionally panic
What is the neodissociation theory?
claims that a portion of a hypnotized person's personality becomes a hidden observer
Sleep is characterized by unresponsiveness to the _____________ and usually limited ______________
environment, mobility
By seeing how their bodies reach to thoughts and ____________, people can learn to change their ______________ processes
feelings, physiological
What does breath meditation consist of?
focusing on inhaling and exhaling
What is melatonin?
hormone that helps regulate daily biological rhythms, linked to sleep-wake cycle, levels increase during night and decrease with exposure to light
How do stimulants effect behavior?
increase energy and alertness
________________ may be caused by anxiety or depression, whereas ____________ is caused by a physical problem that blocks the airway
insomnia, sleep apnea
How do distortion of experience drugs effect behavior?
intensify sensory experiences, distorts perception of time, can relieve glaucoma and nausea, sometimes impairs learning and memory
What drugs cause distortion of experience?
marijuana (THC)
What drugs are opiates?
morphine, heroin
What drugs are mixed stimulant-depressants?
nicotine
Why is hypnosis used?
reduce pain, suppress or enhance memory, change unwanted behaviors, help athletes achieve peak performance
What happens during stage III and IV sleep?
slow wave sleep, first time through stage 4 is about 30 minutes and where one gets rejuvenated
How do mixed stimulant-depressants effect behavior?
stimulate brain activity, but most smokers say cigarettes relax them
Stage I sleep is marked by the presence of low amplitude _________ waves, whereas the deeper level of Stage III sleep shifts to high amplitude __________ waves
theta, alpha
A hypnotist can induce a(n) _____________ by helping a participant relax and lose interest in external ____________
trance, distractions
What is age regression?
under hypnosis, the supposed ability to remember earlier periods of time in one's life (considered unreliable by psychologists)