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Understanding Altered States: Sleep, Dreams, Hypnosis, & Psychoactive Substances, Summaries of Psychology

Drug PsychologyHypnosis and SuggestionConsciousness StudiesSleep Psychology

Various altered states of consciousness, including sleep, dreams, hypnosis, and the effects of psychoactive substances. Topics covered include the importance of sleep, stages of sleep, REM sleep, sleep disorders, dreams, hypnosis, and the use and effects of drugs such as marijuana, hallucinogens, opiates, and alcohol. Students will gain a deeper understanding of these phenomena and their significance.

What you will learn

  • How can hypnosis be used to influence behavior and thought?
  • What are the effects of different psychoactive substances on consciousness and behavior?
  • How does sleep benefit us and what are the different stages of sleep?
  • What are the different types and causes of altered states of consciousness?

Typology: Summaries

2021/2022

Uploaded on 11/04/2022

eilla-gomos
eilla-gomos 🇵🇭

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Download Understanding Altered States: Sleep, Dreams, Hypnosis, & Psychoactive Substances and more Summaries Psychology in PDF only on Docsity! Ch7 Altered States of Consciousness Consciousness — a state of awareness e Altered State of Consciousness — involves a change in mental processes in which one is not completely aware Sleep — is a state of altered consciousness, characterized by unresponsiveness to our environment and usually limited mobility 1. Why do we sleep? a. Restoration — brain recovers from exhaustion and stress b. Primitive Hibernation — body conserves energy c. Adaptive Process — kept human’s out of harm’s way at night when they’d be vulnerable to animal attacks d. Clear our minds of useless info i. Sleep to dream 2. Study of sleep is greatly aided by the EEG, which records the electrical activity of the brain 3. Two types of sleep: Active and Quiet 4. Quiet Stages of Sleep a. Stage I - lightest level of sleep, absence of concentrated thought and you are in a state of relaxation (10 minutes) b. Stage II — brain waves shift from low-amplitude, high frequency to high amplitude, low frequency (30 minutes) c. Stage HII — large amplitude delta waves begin to sweep your brain every second or so d. Stage IV — deepest sleep and its difficult to wake a sleeper in this stage i. Talking out loud, bed wetting, and sleepwalking occur during this stage ii. Important to physical and psychological well-being 5. 75% of sleep is spent in stages I-IV 6. REM (Rapid Eye Movement) Sleep — period of sleep during which the eyes dart back and forth and dreaming usually occurs a. Called active sleep — brain sends out waves that closely resemble those of a person who is fully awake b. Lasts about 15-45 minutes depending on time of night, then you work your way back to Stage IV 7. This cycle is repeated every 90 minutes or so How much sleep? 1. Depends on age and the individual 2. Everyone sleeps and both types of sleep are important to normal functioning 6. Uses of Hypnosis a. Posthypnotic Suggestion — a suggestion made during a hypnotic trance that influences the subject’s behavior afterward i. Helpful in aiding or enhancing memory and changing unwanted behaviors b. Hypnotic Analgesia — a reduction in pain reported by patients undergoing hypnosis Biofeedback — process of learning to control bodily states with the help of machines that provide info about physiological states 1. Has been used to teach people to control brain waves, heart rate, blood pressure, skin temperature, and sweat-gland activity 2. Basic Principle: feedback makes learning possible 3. Using biofeedback to treat conditions without medications is a very active area of research Meditation — focusing attention to clear one’s mind and produce relaxation 1. Three Major Approaches: a. Transcendental Meditation — involves mental repetition of a mantra i. Sit with eyes closed and meditate twice a day for 15-20 minutes each b. Mindfulness Meditation — focus on the present moment c. Breath Meditation — focus on inhaling and exhaling 2. Researchers generally agree that most people can benefit from the sort of systematic relaxation that meditation provides Sec 3: Drugs and Consciousness Psychoactive Drugs — interact with the CNS to alter a person’s mood, perception, and behavior 1. Marijuana — dried leaves and flowers of Indian hemp (Cannabis sativa) that produces an altered state of consciousness when smoked or ingested a. Sensory experiences are greatly enhanced b. Not physically addictive but can be psychologically addictive c. Can instill or heighten a variety of unpleasant experiences d. Effects lung functioning more so than cigarettes e. Disrupts memory formation making it difficult to carry out mental and physical tasks f. Marijuana users score lower on IQ tests than nonusers Hallucinations — are perceptions that have no direct external cause — seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, or feeling things that do not exist 1. Maybe produced by hypnosis, meditation, certain drugs, withdrawal from a drug to which one is addicted and psychological breakdown 2. Also occur during dreaming at night and day and when people are deprived of sleep 3. Periods of high concentration , emotion, or fatigue also cause hallucinations 4. Hallucinations are very much alike from person to person Hallucinogens — main effect is to produce hallucinations, found in plants that grow throughout the world 1. Also known as “Psychedelics” 2. LSD (Lysergic acid diethylamide) — best known and most extensively studied hallucinogen, also the most potent and is one of the most powerful drugs known a. Produces a “trip” that lasts 6-14 hours b. Often taken in strips of paper or sugar cubes in order to control doses c. Side effects include impaired thinking, panic reactions and flashbacks Opiates (Narcotics) — opium, morphine, and heroin 1. Use reduces pain, produces feeling of euphoria, can lead to addiction, and death from respiratory failure Alcohol — most widely abused mind altering substance in the US.
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