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Unit Four- Consciousness [Chapter 5] The Many Meanings of Consciousness • Study of consciousness poses a challenge to psychologists since it can’t be seen or touched – Psychological construct: concept or theory devised in order to help make sense of other observations – Other examples: intelligence, motivation, anxiety • Consciousness as Awareness – Sensory awareness of surroundings (environment) – Selective attention, self-control, inner awareness • Sigmund Freud’s Divisions of Conscious Mind – Conscious: material of which we are currently aware – Preconscious: can be called into conscious mind – Unconscious: material unavailable to awareness • Repression: auto ejection of anxiety-causing thoughts • Consciousness as the Sense of Self – Distinguishing what is us from what is not • Consciousness as the Waking State – Natural state of mental being aware, as opposed to sleep, hypnotic or meditative state, or being “high” The Science of Sleep • We spend approx. 1/3 of our lives asleep – Without sleep, we struggle, possibly die – How much is enough? Eight hours? More than that? – Circadian rhythm: anything that runs on a 24hr cycle • Experiments have shown that without cues humans actually seem to operated on a 25 hour cycle. Weird. • A typical night’s sleep has many stages – Stages are determined by shifts in brainwave activity • NREM: the first four stage involve progressively deeper sleep—slower brain waves—and are not marked by rapid eye movement and simple dreaming • REM: stage 5, similar brainwaves as in stage 1, marked by rapid eye movement & vivid dreaming – We progress through stages many times in one night • The benefits of a good night’s sleep – Serves to rest and rejuvenate the body & recover from stress, consolidate learning & memories • REM sleep seems especially important to learning – Sleep deprivation: insufficient sleep over many days can have dramatic effects on attention & learning What is the Stuff of Dreams? • Psychologists have long debated the purpose and scientific value of an individual’s dreams – Introspective in nature: open to interpretation – Freud: The road to the unconscious mind • Many different theories as to why we dream and what our dreams may mean – Psychoanalytic theory: primal urges that have been repressed disguise themselves in our dreams – Dreams serve to help consolidate memory and learning , solve problems of the previous day – Dreaming serves to keep us asleep during REM cycle • Dreaming in the Waking State: Fantasy – We’re also capable of breaking from reality in waking state though imagination & selective attention • Sexual & aggressive fantasies normal for young people • Combining these two daydreams: not so healthy • Research is unclear as to the purpose of fantasy Hold fast to dreams, For if dreams die Life is a broken-winged bird That cannot fly. - Langston Hughes Hypnosis: I Put a “Spell” on You • Hypnosis: condition in which people appear highly suggestible & behave as though in trance – Started from the ideas of Franz Anton Mesmer – Freud, others used hypnosis for diagnosis, treatment – Involves the narrowing of attention, hypnotic trance • Involves relaxation, but brainwaves differ from sleep • Some people easier to hypnotize: prone to fantasy, know expectations of trance, willing to be hypnotized – Changes in consciousness attributed to hypnosis • Passivity, narrowed attention, highly detailed/false memories, suggestibility, playing unusual roles, perceptual distortions, post-hypnotic amnesia, posthypnotic suggestion • Modern psychology has accepted hypnosis for a number of applications, rejected others – Used for pain and anxiety relief, as an anesthetic, to help treat addictive behaviors, treatment of phobias • Intense debate over its use in recovering memories • Skeptics: suggestion & expectations…placebo effect? – Text provides theories as to how hypnosis works (pp. 204-5) Meditation & Biofeedback: Letting Go & Taking Control • Meditation: various ways of focusing one’s consciousness to alter one’s relationship with the outside world – May involve focusing one’s attention on rituals, exercises, passive observation to alter consciousness • Transcendental meditation (TM) involves repetition of mantras (words or sounds that aide in achieving meditative state) – Suspension of problem solving, planning, awareness are all characteristic of meditative state – Physical effects: less stress, more relaxation • Biofeedback: using real-time biological information on a specific bodily function in order to gain control over that function – Involves some type of display of biological feedback (changing colors, frequency of sounds, etc) – Rats, humans have learned to influence heart rate, brain waves, tension, blood pressure, and pain Drugs: Changing Your Mind • Psychoactive substance: drug that has psych. effects (i.e. stimulation, perceptual distortions) – Depressant: lowers activity of nervous system • Alcohol, opiates (opium, heroin, codeine), barbiturates – Stimulant: increases activity of nervous system • Amphetamines, Adderall, cocaine, nicotine, caffeine – Hallucinogenic: creates sensory/perceptual distortion • Marijuana, LSD (acid), hashish, mescaline, ecstasy – Some drugs work by mimicking neurotransmitters, other cause excessive release or limit their reuptake • All drugs impact brain’s “reward center” in the limbic system, causing excessive dopamine (pleasure) release • Drug use & abuse evident throughout history – Biological, cultural, social, psychological influences • Some use drugs for recreation, others seeking deeper spiritual/ psychological insight, some use for social acceptance or defiance, also therapeutic treatment – Each society has deemed what is inappropriate/illegal • 80’s War on Drugs vs. today’s pharmaceutical marketing • U.S. counter-culture movement: Leary’s Psychedelic Experience and Huxley’s Doors of Perception Addiction & Rehabilitation • Continued drug use can lead to complications – – Substance abuse: user continues to use substance after realizing that use is creating problems in their life Dependence: adaption of brain chemistry creates a physical need for drug & withdrawal symptoms • • • – Addiction: biological disease of the brain resulting in compulsive use of substance • • • Considered more serious than substance abuse Self-medication Theory: drugs used in order to ease physical & mental stress issues w/o medical supervision Tolerance: effect of drug lessens over time, result in user needing more of drug to achieve the same effect Genetic, psychosocial, environmental influences Comparison between addiction & dependence??? Treatment attempts to cure dependence/addiction – – Only an est. 10% of those who need treatment seek it Treatment programs have been shown to effective in helping users toward successful recovery (eventually) • • • Stages: Detoxification, treatment, relapse prevention Drug therapy: medication to lessen withdrawal Behavioral therapy: target attitudes toward drugs, self