science of sleep exam 2

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110 Terms

1
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neurons are __

communication cells

2
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glia are _

support cells for neurons

3
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neurotransmitters are ____

cells that allow communication between neurons

4
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what are the NTs associated with wakefulness?

acetylcholine

5
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dopamine

6
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norepinephrine

7
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serotonin

8
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histamine

9
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what is the primary NT active during REM?

acetylcholine

10
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which NT is associated with an increase in relatedness?

norepinephrine

11
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norepinephrine release is stimulated by _

amphetamines

12
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cocaine increases the activity of __

dopamine

13
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the increase of activity causes by cocaine results in

stimulation

14
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if serotonin increases, depressive symptoms _

decrease

15
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SSRIs increase __ activity

serotonin

16
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older antihistamines result in _

sedation (benadryl)

17
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newer antihistamines are

less sedating (claritin)

18
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non-REM NTs include:

GABA

19
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Adenosine

20
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what is the primary NT associated with sleep?

GABA

21
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what is the main inhibitory NT?

GABA

22
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which neurochemical increases during the day?

adenosine

23
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adenosine is blocked by what?

caffeine

24
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caffeine is a _

stimulant

25
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antagonist of adenosine

26
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REM NT

acetylcholine

27
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___ neurons in the Pons become active during REM

acetylcholine

28
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which neurochemical is closely related to serotonin and has the same metabolic pathways?

melatonin

29
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which neurochemical regulates the biological clock?

melatonin

30
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wake is facilitated by

ascending reticular activating system (ARAS)

31
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locus coeruleus (location and role)

located in pons

32
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plays role in wakefulness

33
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locus coeruleus has a high concentration of _

norepinephrine neurons

34
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dorsal raphe nucleus role

role in wakefulness, but unclear

35
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dorsal raphe has high concentration in _

serotonin neurons

36
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primary brain structure for non-REM sleep

basal forebrain area

37
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which brain structure generates REM

pons

38
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pons geniculate occipital (POS) spikes

associated with REM sleep

39
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how we get visual imagery

40
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muscle atonia

paralysis during REM (neck down)

41
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what is muscle atonia regulated by?

area around the subcoerulear (below the locus coeruleus)

42
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drugs exert effects by _

altering neurotransmitters

43
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agonist

drug that mimics or increases activity of a NT

44
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antagonist

drug that reduces or inhibits activity of a NT

45
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GABA agonist does what?

enhances inhibitory effects

46
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caffeine does what?

decreases adenosine but increases overall behavior

47
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tolerance

decreased effectiveness of a drug over time

48
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need to take more doses of the drug to notice effects

49
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factors that influence drug action?

administration, absorption, distribution, half-life, metabolites

50
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administration

how the drug is taken

51
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absorption

how well it is taken up

52
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distribution

how well its sent around the body

53
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half-life

how long it lasts in the body

54
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metabolites

molecules the drug breaks down into

55
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which drugs increase GABA activity?

sedatives/hypnotics

56
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barbiturates

older, rarely used anymore because they are addictive and lethal when paired with alcohol

57
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benzodiazepines

much safer

58
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valium used to be widely used but not anymore

59
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what effects on sleep do sedatives/hypnotics have?

reduce sleep latency

60
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increase total sleep time

61
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decrease stage 1 sleep

62
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increase stage 2 sleep

63
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increases spindle activity

64
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decreases slow wave sleep/stage 3

65
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increase fast (beta) activity - especially barbiturates

66
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SSRIs fall under which category?

antidepressants

67
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examples of SSRIs

paxil, prozac, and zoloft

68
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what effects do antidepressants have on sleep?

increase latency to REM sleep

69
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reduce total REM sleep

70
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what effects do antipsychotics have?

may increase total sleep time (TST)

71
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can make people sleepy/sedated

72
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caffeine is an example of which kind of drug?

stimulants

73
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what effects do stimulants have on sleep?

increase wake

74
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increase sleep latency

75
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decrease total sleep time

76
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increase stage 1 sleep

77
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may decrease SWS

78
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may delay onset and duration of REM

79
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what effects does alcohol have sleep?

increase total sleep time

80
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decrease wake

81
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decrease REM during first half of night, pushes REM towards second half

82
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sleep tends to become more fragmented in second half of night

83
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what is lithium used for?

to treat bipolar disorder

84
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the effects of lithium are similar to antidepressants because they…

decrease REM

85
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increases latency to REM

86
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how is lithium different from antidepressants?

it increases SWS/stage 3 sleep

87
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what are the two phases of REM sleep?

tonic and phasic

88
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tonic sleep

REM sleep without eye movement and twitches ("quiet REM")

89
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phasic sleep

REM sleep with eye movements and phasic twitches ("active REM")

90
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heart rate: non-REM vs wake

slows

91
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heart rate: tonic REM vs non-REM

about the same

92
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heart rate: phasic REM vs tonic REM

increases, variable

93
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respiration: non-REM vs wake

decreases

94
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respiration: tonic REM vs non-REM

increases, variable

95
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respiration: phasic REM vs tonic REM

further increases

96
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respiration is irregular during ____

REM

97
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what are the 5 factors of dreaming (all reflected in dreams)?

SES

98
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Age

99
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Gender

100
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Personality

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