Consciousness
Night terrors
A person may scream while asleep. They may also feel intense fear. Night terrors can last from a few seconds to minutes. In some cases, a person might also experience sleepwalking during night terrors.
Four major brain waves that relate to sleep and alertness
Beta, Alpha, Theta, Delta
Global Workspace Theory
Images and ideas form together as a unified picture of reality. The input then becomes output, or speech and action. This theory examines how brains function through a series of activities.
Stages of sleep categories
Rapid Eye Movement (REM) and Non-rapid eye movement (NREM)
four major consciousness levels
Superconscious, Conscious, Subconscious, dream state
integrated information theory
You apply your experience and rate the choices based on a desirable value.
altered state of consciousness
a change in one's normal state of mind with or without one's intention
Narcolepsy
a chronic neurological disorder in which a person's brain is unable to regulate the sleep cycle
Non-rapid-eye-movement stage 3
a deep sleep that lasts for about 30 minutes; slow breathing and pulse rates and limp muscles, and is difficult to wake; called delta sleep, because the brain produces slow delta waves
Cognitive development theory
a dream is closely associated with the dreamer's mental development.
Depressants
a form of chemical that depresses or inhibits the function of the central nervous system and neural activity
Superconscious
a highly attentive state of consciousness and perception; thinking and organization occur without the person's active participation.
Hypnosis
an altered state of consciousness during which a person is fully conscious in a clinical sense, but not in a normal state. In this state, the person is more open to different behavior and suggestions
Meditation
an altered state of consciousness. It encourages a deeper connection between the self and others
Rapid eye movement (REM)
approximately 20 percent of overall sleep time in this stage and experience dreams. A person can be in this stage for 15 minutes to one hour
theta brain waves
are seen in people of all age groups when they are sleeping; sometimes seen in awake infants or children
Psychoanalytic theory of dreams
closely relates to Sigmund Freud's theory, which states that people are driven by instincts that are repressed during the waking stage
beta brain waves
common among fully awake, alert people of all ages
Ernest Hilgard
developed the Neodissociation Theory of Hypnosis
insomnia
difficult to fall asleep or to stay asleep
sleep apnea
disrupts a person's sleep due to pauses in breathing
Information processing theory
dreaming is a process to deal with information and observations collected from daily life and memories. It creates images, impressions, and narratives that are inside a person's head.
Physiological function theory
dreams serve a physiological function, providing the brain with periodic stimulation along the sensory pathways.
Stimulants
excite neural activity and can temporarily elevate a person's awareness
According to theories of consciousness, collected information can be correlated in a(n) ________________ manner.
geometric
Hallucinogens
have an effect on thinking and distort perceptions.
During which stage of sleep, also known as delta sleep, would a person have slow breathing and be difficult to wake.
in stage 3 of non-rapid-eye-movement sleep
Maureen is writing a report on how the brain may use dreams to consolidate and organize the information, stimuli, and memories observed and collected over the course of the day. Which theory of dreams is Maureen researching?
information processing theory
Sleepwalking
may walk or perform activities while asleep; also called somnambulism.
alpha brain waves
occur when a person becomes relaxed and drowsy to the point of closing their eyes
delta brain waves
occur when a person is in the dream state
dream state
occurs when a person is asleep, dreaming, and in a deep unconscious state.
Non-rapid-eye-movement stage 0:
prelude to sleep; relaxed, eyes closed
Non-rapid-eye-movement stage 2
rapid brain activity and a decline in heart rate and respiration; about 20 mins
Neuroleptic drugs
reduce dopamine activity, thereby reducing schizophrenic symptoms.
Neutral activity models
reflect an anticipation of something that follows an action, with consequences as a result of the action.
In the global workplace theory of consciousness, Bernard Baars proposed that consciousness generates what kind of outputs?
speech and action
Non-rapid-eye-movement stage 1
still somewhat awake, or is lightly asleep and might toss and turn; heart rate and body temperature drops and muscles relax; might experience jerks; brain produces high-amplitude theta waves.
Amphetamines
stimulants. They can increase dopamine activity and produce schizophrenic-like paranoid symptoms when used to treat physiology disorders.
Narcotics
stimulate endorphins to work as a pain reliever
Social-cognitive theories
view the person as an active participant. The effortlessness associated with hypnosis gets the participant to respond and follow suggestions
Subconscious
when a person is deeply relaxed as well as just before and after sleep; includes light meditation and hypnosis
Conscious
when a person is fully awake, alert, and functioning as a human being
selective inattention
when you actually ignore and avoid things that are not important to you or that upset you emotionally
selective attention
when you determine what to pay attention to and what to ignore
change blindness
when you do not notice or are not aware of a shift or change in your visual environment
inattentional blindness
when you do not notice something near you or something that is obvious and in plain sight