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Consciousness

Consciousness monitors and regulates our thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and behaviors. It is the subjective awareness of our mental events. Functions of consciousness include monitoring the self and environment, regulating thought and behavior, and selectively diverting attention away from upsetting information. States of consciousness can be qualitatively different and include sleeping, dreaming, meditation, hypnosis, and altered states induced by drugs and alcohol.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views22 pages

Consciousness

Consciousness monitors and regulates our thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and behaviors. It is the subjective awareness of our mental events. Functions of consciousness include monitoring the self and environment, regulating thought and behavior, and selectively diverting attention away from upsetting information. States of consciousness can be qualitatively different and include sleeping, dreaming, meditation, hypnosis, and altered states induced by drugs and alcohol.

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a4agarwal
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CONSCIOUSNESS

Functions of Consciousness
• Consciousness monitors
– self
– environment

• Consciousness regulates
– thought
– behavior
Consciousness
• The subjective awareness of mental events.
– Thoughts
– Feelings
– Perceptions

• States of consciousness
– Qualitatively different patterns of subjective experience

• Selective inattention
– Selectively diverting our attention away from
information that may upset us
Psychodynamic Unconscious
Freud’s model includes:
• Conscious mental processes
– Subjective awareness of stimuli, feelings, ideas (my
voice)

• Preconscious mental processes


– Not presently conscious but could be quickly brought
into consciousness (your first kiss with a non-relative)

• Unconscious mental processes


– Inaccessible to consciousness as they are too anxiety
provoking (sexual abuse when you were a young child)
Unconscious Motivation
• Our ability to be driven by motives of which we
are not consciously aware of

• Cognitive Unconscious
– Information-processing mechanisms that operate
outside of our awareness

• Procedural Knowledge
– Shift gears on a manual transmission in your car

• Implicit Memory
– How to get on a bicycle
Attention & Selection
• Attention
– Process of focusing consciousness awareness

• Selection
– Deciding where to focus
• External stimuli
• Internal motivation
Divided Attention

• Involves attempts to follow two sources of


stimuli at the same time
– Drive
– Talk on cell phone
Mindlessness
• “Attention not paid precisely to those
substantive elements that are relevant for
the successful resolution of the situation”
Ellen Langer

• Three types
– Categorical Thinking (Stereotyping)
– Act from a single perspective (Rigid adherence)
– Automatic behaviors or habits
Location of Consciousness

• Consciousness involves a network of


neurons distributed through out the brain

• Damage to hindbrain structures, especially


the RAS, can lead to total loss of
consciousness
Sleeping and Dreaming
• Sleep involves a lack of conscious
awareness

• We differ on the amount of sleep we need


– Average range is 6-8 hours per night

• Circadian Rhythms
– Biological cycle of sleep and waking
– Controlled by the hypothalamus
Sleep Deprivation & Disorders
• Sleep deprivation is considered a form of torture

• Negative impact on immune system

• Inability to stay alert

• Sleep Diseases include:


– Narcolepsy-Sleep attacks during conscious states

– Sleep Apnea-Brief periods of not breathing

– Night Terrors- Wake up with intense fear


Insomnia
• Insomnia involves the inability to sleep

• Impacts all of us at some point

• How to control for insomnia


– Avoid sleeping too much, especially during the day
– Do not try to force sleep
– Avoid bright lights or ticking clocks near bed
– Avoid physical exercise late at night
– Avoid caffeine & alcohol before going to bed
– Don’t eat a large meal before going to bed
Stages of Sleep

• Regular and predictable stages of sleep involving


brain waves measured with EEG monitors

• Two types of brain waves

– Beta Waves=High frequency & low amplitude

– Alpha Waves= Low frequency & higher amplitude


Stages of Sleep
• Stage I
– Brief (few minutes)
– Beta waves decrease and alpha waves emerge

• Stage II
– Sleep spindles and K-complexes show up
– Sleep deepens and alpha waves disappear

• Stage III
– Large slow rhythmic delta waves show up

• Stage 4
– When more than 50% of brain activity is delta waves
REM Sleep
• Rapid Eye Movement (REM) Sleep also called
paradoxical stage of sleep

• Occurs when one re-ascends to Stage I sleep

• EEG resembles awake state and the eyes dart


round in a rapid manner for several minutes

• Dreaming takes place in REM sleep


REM and non-REM Sleep
• The sleep cycle repeats over the course of a
sleep cycle

• Stage I when dreaming = REM sleep

• Stages II, III, IV= Non REM sleep


Dreaming
• Psychodynamic View
– Based on unconscious motives

– Manifest Content
• What the person is actually dreaming
– Falling off a mountain

– Latent Content
• The meaning behind the manifest images
– Fear of failing an important examination
Dreaming
• Cognitive View
– Cognitive constructions that reflect concerns
we experience while awake
– A form of thought

• Biological View
– Biological phenomena with no meaning at all
– Random discharges of neurons
Altered States of Consciousness
• Meditation
– Deep state of tranquility
– Alter normal flow of conscious thought
– Focus on a mantra and block out other thoughts

• Hypnosis
– Deep relaxation and suggestibility
– We differ widely on hypnotic susceptibility
– You won’t do something under hypnosis that you
would not do in a normal conscious state
• Chicken Dance
• Hit someone
Drugs, Alcohol &
Consciousness
• Psychoactive Drugs
– Drugs that operate on the nervous system
– Cocaine, Ecstasy & LSD

• Alcohol
– Depressant
– Barbiturates
– Calming effect
Stimulants
• Stimulants
– Energize
– Increase heart rate and blood pressure

• Nicotine & Caffeine are common stimulants

• Cocaine & Amphetamines


– Hyper rush
– Very addictive
Stimulants
• Hallucinogens
– Alter interpretation of sensory information
– Produce bizarre perceptions
– Can do serious, and irreversible, damage to brain cells

• Marijuana
– Manipulates dopamine reward circuits in the brain
– Current product is much stronger than your parents
marijuana as a result of decades of product
enhancement

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