Module 23
How is the hypothalamus involved in sleep?
In response to decreasing light the hypothalamus' suprachiasmatic nucleus causes the pineal gland to increase production of melatonin, leading you to sleep.
The hypnagogic sensations of falling or floating are most likely to occur during which sleep stage?
NREM-1 sleep
After Carlos had been asleep for about an hour and a half, his heart began to beat faster, his breathing became fast and irregular, and his closed eyes began to dart back and forth. Carlos was most likely experiencing
REM sleep
Paradoxical sleep is to slow-wave sleep as ________ sleep is to ________ sleep.
REM; NREM-3
With the approach of night, our body temperatures begin to drop. This best illustrates the dynamics of the
circadian rhythm
Patrick has just entered REM sleep. Which of the following is he likely to experience?
body paralysis
Alpha waves are associated with
relaxed by awake state
The rhythmic bursts of brain activity that occur during NREM-2 sleep are called
sleep spindles
Researchers have demonstrated that people trained to perform tasks recall them better after a night's sleep than after several hours awake. This finding suggests that sleep
is involved in the memory process
Which of the following is true of melatonin?
it is a sleep hormone released by the pineal gland into the bloodstream
REM sleep is called paradoxical sleep because
our nervous system is highly active, while our voluntary muscles hardly move
Forty-year-old Lance insists that he never dreams. Research suggests that he probably
would report a vivid dreams he are awakened during REM sleep
The large, slow brain waves associated with deep sleep are called
delta waves