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Chapter 5: Variations in Consciousness

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Title: Chapter 5: Variations in Consciousness


1
Chapter 5 Variations in Consciousness
2
On the Nature of Consciousness
  • Awareness of Internal and External Stimuli
  • Variations on levels of awareness
  • James stream of consciousness
  • Freud unconscious
  • Sleep/dreaming research

3
The ElectroencephalographA Physiological Index
of Consciousness
  • EEG monitoring of brain electrical activity
  • Brain-waves
  • Amplitude (height)
  • Frequency (cycles per second)
  • Beta (13-24 cps)
  • Alpha (8-12 cps)
  • Theta (4-7 cps)
  • Delta (lt4 cps)

4
Table 5.1 EEG Patterns Associated with States of
Consciousness
5
Biological Rhythms and Sleep
  • Circadian Rhythms 24 hr biological cycles
  • Regulation of sleep/other body functions
  • Physiological pathway of the biological clock
  • Light levels ? retina ? suprachiasmatic nucleus
    of hypothalamus ? pineal gland ? secretion of
    melatonin
  • Ignoring circadian rhythms - tired, sluggish, and
    irritable
  • Realigning circadian rhythms - people realign
    their circadian rhythms, by administering small,
    carefully timed doses of melatonin and by
    carefully timed exposure to bright lights, but at
    this point there is no practical treatment that
    works for most people.

6
Sleep/Waking Research
  • Instruments
  • Electroencephalograph brain electrical activity
  • Electromyograph muscle activity
  • Electrooculograph eye movements
  • Other bodily functions also observed heart rate,
    breathing rate, temperature, etc., as well as
    videotape the person sleeping through a window

7
Sleep Stages Cycling Through Sleep
  • 5 stages of sleep based on physiological
    recordings
  • Stage 1 light sleep brief, transitional (1-7
    minutes)
  • alpha ? theta
  • hypnic jerks
  • Stage 2 brief bursts of higher-frequency brain
    waves sleep spindles (10-25 minutes)
  • Stages 3 4 low frequency delta waves slow-wave
    sleep (30 minutes)
  • Stage 5 REM, EEG similar to awake, vivid
    dreaming (first a few minutes, then longer).
  • Developmental differences in REM sleep

8
Age, Culture, and Sleep
  • Age trends
  • Infants lots of sleep and lots of REM. Infants
    sleep more frequently (6-8 times in a 24-hour
    period) and may sleep up to 16 of those 24 hours.
    Up to 50 of this time is spent in REM sleep.
  • Aging less sleep and less slow-wave sleep
  • Cultural variations Comparative studies of sleep
    in different cultures show very little variation
    in the amount of time spent sleeping, but larger
    differences in sleeping arrangements.
  • Co-sleeping
  • Napping

9
Figure 5.4 Changes in sleep patterns over the
life span
10
Figure 5.5 Cultural variations in how long
people tend to sleep
11
Why Do We Sleep?
  • Hypothesis 1
  • Sleep evolved to conserve organisms energy
  • Hypothesis 2
  • Immobilization during sleep is adaptive because
    it reduces danger
  • Hypothesis 3
  • Sleep helps animals to restore energy and other
    bodily resources

12
Sleep Deprivation
  • Partial deprivation or sleep restriction
  • impaired attention, reaction time, coordination,
    and decision making
  • accidents Chernobyl, Exxon Valdez
  • Selective deprivation
  • REM and slow-wave sleep rebound effect
  • waking subjects up whenever they go into REM
    sleep causes the person to go back into REM
    faster. Pretty soon have to wake them up almost
    constantly to keep them from going into REM
    suggesting that the body needs REM. The same
    rebound effect has been found for slow-wave sleep.

13
Sleep Problems
  • Insomnia difficulty falling or staying asleep
  • -trouble falling asleep, trouble remaining
    asleep, and persistent early morning awakening.
  • Difficulty falling asleep is most common
    among young people, while early morning awakening
    and trouble staying asleep are more common among
    middle-aged and elderly people.
  • 34-35 of adults report problems with
    insomnia and about 15-17 have severe or frequent
    insomnia. The prevalence increases with age and
    is 50 more common in men than in women
  • Narcolepsy falling asleep uncontrollably -
    person with Narcolepsy goes directly into REM
    sleep.
  • Sleep Apnea reflexive gasping for air that
    awakens person - With sleep apnea, the person
    literally stops breathing for 15 to 60 seconds.
  • Somnambulism sleepwalking - first two hours of
    sleep, during slow-wave sleep, and is principally
    dangerous because sleepwalkers are prone to
    accidents.

14
Figure 5.6 The vicious cycle of dependence on
sleeping pills
15
The Nature and Contents of Dreams
  • Dreams mental experiences during sleep
  • Content usually familiar
  • Common themes - falling, being pursued, trying
    repeatedly to do something, school, sex, being
    late, eating, being frightened
  • Waking life spillover day residue
  • Western vs. Non-Western interpretations - many
    non-Western cultures are likely to view dreams as
    important information about themselves, the
    future, or the spiritual world.

16
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17
Figure 5.8 Three theories of dreaming
18
Hypnosis Altered State of Consciousness or Role
Playing?
  • Hypnosis a systematic procedure that increases
    suggestibility - relaxation, narrowed attention
  • Hypnotic susceptibility individual differences -
    10 of people are especially easy to hypnotize,
    10 especially difficult.
  • Effects produced through hypnosis
  • Anesthesia
  • Sensory distortions and hallucinations
  • Disinhibition
  • Posthypnotic suggestions and amnesia
  • Researchers argue about whether hypnosis is
    really an altered state of awareness or if it is
    simply people doing what they think they are
    supposed to do when they are hypnotized. The
    dissociation hypothesis holds that hypnosis
    splits consciousness into two streams divided
    consciousness.

19
Meditation Pure Consciousness or Relaxation
  • Meditation practices that train attention to
    heighten awareness and bring mental processes
    under greater voluntary control
  • Yoga, Zen, transcendental meditation (TM)
  • Effects of meditation include decreased heart
    rate, respiration rate and a relaxed EEG, with
    predominant theta and alpha rhythm patterns.
  • PET show increased activity in PFC and Parietal
    lobe. Attention and location in space
    transcendence ?
  • Potential physiological benefits
  • Similar to effective relaxation procedures

20
Chapter 8 Cognition and Intelligence
21
Types of Problems
  • Problems of inducing structure
  • Series completion and analogy problems - where
    people are required to discover relations among
    numbers, words, symbols, or ideas.
  • e.g., 1,2,8,3,4,6,5,6 _____
  • Problems of arrangement
  • String problem and Anagrams - where people
    arrange the parts of a problem in a way that
    satisfies some criterion
  • e.g., anagram what english word?
  • rwaet ? keroj?
  • Often solved through insight
  • Problems of transformation
  • involve carrying out a sequence of
    transformations in order to reach a specific
    goal.

22
Effective Problem Solving
  • Barriers to effective problem solving
  • Irrelevant Information - getting bogged down in
    unimportant information
  • Functional Fixedness - tendency to perceive an
    item only in terms of its most common use
  • Mental Set - when people persist in using
    problem-solving strategies that have worked in
    the past
  • Unnecessary Constraints - assuming unnecessary
    constraints on the problem

23
Approaches to Problem Solving
  • Trial-and-error - effective method of solving
    problems if there are only a few possible
    solutions, but quickly becomes unwieldy when
    there are many possible solutions.
  • Heuristics - guiding principles or rules of
    thumb used in solving problems. They dont
    guarantee success.
  • Forming subgoals - allows one to solve part of
    the problem, therefore moving toward success.
  • Searching for analogies - Searching for analogies
    involves using a solution to a previous problem
    to solve a current one.
  • Changing the representation of a problem math
    function viewed in graph form

24
Culture, Cognitive Style,and Problem Solving
  • Field dependence relying on external frames of
    reference
  • Field independence relying on internal frames
    of reference
  • Western cultures inspire field independence
  • Holistic vs. analytic cognitive styles
  • Nisbett and colleagues (2001) argue that people
    from East Asian cultures display a holistic
    cognitive style focusing on context and
    relationships among elements in a field (wholes).
  • People from Western cultures, alternatively, show
    an analytic cognitive style focusing on objects
    and their properties rather than context.

25
Each group saw computer animated visual scenes
26
Decision MakingChoices and Chances
  • Simon (1957) theory of bounded rationality -
    decision making strategies are simplistic and
    often yield irrational results.
  • Making Choices
  • Additive strategies - Additive decision models
    are used to make choices by rating the attributes
    of each alternative and selecting the alternative
    with most desirable attributes (Few options)
  • Elimination by aspects - making choices by
    gradually eliminating unattractive alternatives.
    (Many options)
  • Risky decision making
  • Expected value - what you stand to gain
  • Subjective utility - what an outcome is
    personally worth to an individual. For example,
    insurance may provide a sense of security.

27
Heuristics in Judging Probabilities
  • The availability heuristic - involves basing the
    estimated probability of an event on the ease
    with which relevant instances come to mind
  • The tendency to ignore base rates Not taking
    into account how frequently something occurs when
    making a judgment. e.g., Steve is very shy and
    withdrawn, invariably helpful, but with little
    interest in people or the world of reality. He
    has a passion for order and detail. Is Steve a
    librarian or car salesman?
  • The gamblers fallacy - The gamblers fallacy is
    the belief that the odds of a chance event
    increase if the event hasnt occurred recently
  • e.g., flipping a coin T-H-H-H-H is it more
    likely to be heads?
  • Overestimating the improbable - how people tend
    to greatly overestimate the likelihood of
    dramatic, vivid, but infrequent, events that
    receive heavy media coverage Tornados,
    hurricanes, fires ..

28
Evolutionary Analyses Flaws in Decision Making
and Fast and Frugal Heuristics
  • While research shows that human decision making
    is replete with bias and error, evolutionary
    psychologists argue that this is due to the
    laboratory tasks used to measure it.
  • Cosmides and Tooby (1996)
  • Unrealistic standard of rationality
  • Problem solving research based on contrived and
    artificial problems
  • We dont typically calculate probabilities in the
    real world interactions
  • Gigerenzer (2000) humans do not have the time,
    resources, or capacities to gather all
    information, consider all alternatives, calculate
    all probabilities and risks, and then make the
    statistically optimal decision
  • Fast and frugal heuristics - quick, one-reason
    decisions which yield inferences that are often
    just as accurate as much more elaborate and
    time-consuming strategies
  • Less than perfect but adaptive

29
The Evolution of Intelligence Testing
  • Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon (1905)
  • first intelligence test in 1905, Binet-Simon
    Intelligence Scale was a test designed to single
    out youngsters in need of special
    trainingexpressed a childs score in terms of
    mental age for example, a 4 year-old child with
    a mental age of 6 performed like the average 6
    year-old on the test
  • Lewis Terman (1916)
  • Terman used a new scoring scheme, the
    intelligence quotient, dividing a childs mental
    age by chronological age and multiplying by 100.
    This made it possible to compare children of
    different ages.
  • Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
  • Intelligence Quotient (IQ) MA/CA x 100
  • David Wechsler (1955)
  • Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
  • - Two innovations in intelligence
    testing
  • First, his scales give more emphasis to nonverbal
    reasoning, yielding a verbal IQ, a performance
    IQ, and a full-scale IQ.
  • Second, Wechsler devised a new scoring system
    based on the normal distribution the deviation
    IQ.

30
What Do IQ Scores Mean?
  • The normal distribution - a symmetric,
    bell-shaped curve that represents the pattern in
    which many human characteristics are dispersed in
    the population
  • Distribution set so mean is 100
  • Standard deviation
  • the standard deviation shows how far a score is
    from the mean about 68 of scores fall within 1
    SD (plus or minus) from the mean
  • Deviation IQ scores - A persons raw score is
    converted to a deviation score, which is the
    persons score on the scale where the mean is set
    to 100
  • Conversion to percentile scores - A percentile
    score indicates the percentage of people who
    score at or below the score you obtained.

31
Mean 100
1 S.D. 34 in either direction 2 S.Ds 14
I.Q. Scores 100 mean 1 SD - 15 2 SD - 30
Percentiles Mean 100 50th percentile
Figure 8.15 The normal distribution
32
Reliability and Validity of IQ tests
  • Although they are intended to measure potential,
    IQ tests inevitably assess both knowledge and
    potential
  • Exceptionally reliable correlations into the
    .90s test retest
  • Qualified validity valid indicators of
    academic/verbal intelligence, not intelligence in
    a truly general sense
  • Correlations
  • .40s.50s with school success
  • .60s.80s with number of years in school
  • Predictive of occupational attainment, debate
    about predictiveness of performance

33
Heredity and Environment as Determinants of
Intelligence
  • Heredity
  • Twin and adoption studies - The basic rationale
    is that identical and fraternal twins develop
    under similar environmental conditions, but
    identical twins share more genesif identical
    twins end up more similar on a given
    characteristic, it must be genetic.
  • Environment
  • Adoption studies provide evidence that upbringing
    plays an important role in mental ability, as
    adopted children show some resemblance to their
    foster parents. Also, siblings reared together
    are more similar in IQ than siblings reared
    apart. In fact, entirely unrelated children who
    are reared together show resemblance in IQ.
  • The Flynn effect - The Flynn effect is the trend,
    all over the developed world, for IQ scores to
    increase from one generation to the next.
    Hypotheses for why this occurs focus on
    environmental variables, as evolution does not
    operate in a generation

34
Figure 8.19 Studies of IQ similarity
35
Interaction Heredity and Environment The
concept of the Reaction Range - The environment
determines whether a person will fall at the
upper or lower end of their genetically
determined range.
Figure 8.21 Reaction range
36
Cultural Differences in IQ
  • Heritability as an explanation
  • Aurthur Jensen (1969)
  • These arguments have been challenged on a
    number of grounds. First, even if IQ is largely
    due to heredity, group differences may not be.
    Social class and socioeconomic disadvantage are
    correlated with ethnicity, so environmental
    variables are not equal between groups.
  • Socioeconomic disadvantage as an explanation
  • Kamins cornfield analogy socioeconomic
    disadvantage

37
New Directions in the Study of Intelligence
  • Biological Indexes and Correlates of Intelligence
  • Reaction time and inspection time
  • Brain size

38
Cognitive Conceptualizations of
Intelligence Sternbergs triarchic theory and
successful intelligence
Figure 8.23 Sternbergs triarchic theory of
intelligence
39
Expanding the Concept of IntelligenceGardners
multiple intelligences
40
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