SLEEP AND WAKING - CHAPTER 11
Biorhythms
3 Categories
- Infradian
- Less than once a day
- Menstrual cycle
- Circadian
- Sleep wake cycle
- Coordinates biochemical, physiological and bx
- Ultradian
- More than once a day
- Sleep cycle
- Zeitgebers: external cue that biorhythm depends upon
- Free running circadian: absence of zeitgebers
- Biosphere study: Environment with only artificial lighting and no clock
- Sleep wake cycle gets long
- Someone who is completely blind or working in coal mines or submarines can have some sleep disorders
- Entrainment: Reset
- Impact of light deprivation
Individual Variations in Sleep Patterns
- Morning (lark) vs. evening (night owl) people
- Positive emotions and subjective well-being higher in those who are morning ppl
- Adolescence shift → much more likely to be night owls
- Tend to have lower levels of Melatonin
- Mature brain is much more likely to be a morning person/ more alert
Shift Work: work schedule is at odds of general sleep wake cycle (2nd or 3rd shift)
- Shift maladaptation syndrome
- Disturbed sleep for evening and night shift workers
- Health, personality, mood, and interpersonal problems
- Accident rates higher
- Lark vs. night owl
- 2nd shift night owls are better off than larks
- 3rd shift is bad for everyone
- Worse if work schedule varies
Jet Lag, and Daylight-Saving Time
- Jet lag
- Conflict b/w zeitgeber and interal clock
- If gained time then it isnt really a problem, but if you lose time then symptoms are more present
- Fatigue, irritability, sleepiness
- Daylight saving time
- Symptoms of jet lag
- Risk of heart attack
Body’s Internal Clocks Manage Circadian Rhythms
- Suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) (master clock)
- Keep circadian rhythm
- Oscillation of protein production and degradation is a mechanism that allows the brain’s master clock tell time
- Intrinsically photosensitive retinal cells info to SCN → melanospin (photopigment)-light receptor cell
- SCN >>> SNS >>> pineal gland>>> melatonin
- Regulation by SCN
- Body temp, hormone secretion, urine production, blood pressure
- Can adjust to a phase shift → daylight savings, difference in sleep from weekdays to weekends
- SCN (1-2 cycles) vs. peripheral clocks (take longer)
Biochemistry of Circadian Rhythms
- Melatonin
- Starts to increase at 10 or 11am
- Peak at 4 AM
- 2nd peak?
- May have another around 3-4 pm
- Effects
- Pineal gland tumors, constant exposure to light, melatonin supplements, immune system (stronger w proper amounts)
- Cortisol
- High in morning, low at night
- Effects on heart rate, blood pressure, energy
- Impact of crossing time zones
Neural Correlates of Waking and Sleep
Electroencephalogram (EEG) Recordings of Waking and Sleep
- Desynchronous: independent action
- Synchronous: dependent action (unison) → deep sleep
—--Waking
- Typically alternate between beta and alpha
Brain Wave Frequencies
- Gamma – greater than 30 cps (cycles per second) → “in the zone”
- Beta – 14-30 cps → alert, focused
- Alpha – 8-13 cps → relaxed wakefulness
- Theta – 3-7 cps → light sleep (still have some awareness of outside world)
- Delta – less than 3 cps → deep sleep
Sleep Cycle
- Sleep (90-120 minute cycles)
- 1 NREM (theta, 10-15 minutes, SNS slows)
- 2 NREM (theta/sleep spindles/K-complex, 15 minutes, 50% of sleep, SNS)
- Sleep spindle: sudden burst of activity, happens every 14 seconds
- K-complex: opposite of sleep spindle, (single delta wave)
- 3 NREM (theta/20% delta, 5-40 minutes): deep sleep
- REM (beta/theta, SNS active but major muscle paralysis)
- Breathing and heart rate increase
Brain Networks Control Waking and Sleep
- Default mode network (DFN)
- Mind wandering/daydreaming → unfocused thought
- 50% of time awake in DMN
- Inverse relationship between focused activity & DMN
- NREM Sleep networks
- Preoptic area (POA) of hypothalamus → (homeostasis)
- Monitors sleep debt (duration & intensity of sleep)
- Consistent sleep deprivation
- Electrical stimulation of POA produces immediate NREM sleep
- REM Networks
- Pons active during REM
- Pons also responsible for muscle paralysis and REM movements
- Frontal lobe → inactive
- Hippocampus → more active, impact dreams
- Amygdala → more active, emotional (fear)
- Anterior cingulate cortex → active, pleasure
Biochemical Correlates of Waking and Sleep
- Adenosine
- Builds up during wakefulness
- Gradually drops during sleep
- Caffeine blocks adenosine receptors
- Melatonin
- Onset of dark cycle
- Surge before “opening of sleep gate” → right before you fall asleep
Functions of Sleep
Changes in Sleep over the Lifetime
- Infants (newborn/1st month)
- 12-16 hours total sleep, 50% REM, more w premature
- Up to 12 months
- 1-5 years
- 8.7 hours, higher delta (very deep sleep) wave time 3-6yrs
- More deep sleep than any other age
- Puberty
- Want more sleep (9-10 hours), less delta
- 50’s and older
- Lose 27 minutes oer decade, less delta
- Calcification of pineal gland (less melatonin), less sleep spindles (sudden burst of activity during 2NREM)
- Impact quantity and quality of sleep
- Elderly adults may produce less melatonin bc of calcification of the pineal
EFFECTS OF SLEEP DEPRIVATION
- Hallucination after 72 hours
- Longest someone stayed awake was 11 days (recovered fine)
Possible Advantages of Sleep
- Safety
- Impact on amount of sleep
- We have a safe environment to sleep
- Horse gets least amount of sleep
- No protection other than running
- Sloth gets most sleep
- Physical restoration (NREM)
- Restores body, conserves energy
- Immune system, healing (cannot heal wounds when sleep deprived), neurogenesis (creation of new neurons), joint/muscle pain
- Animals >>> metabolism >>> sleep
- Animals that have a faster metabolism → more sleep
- Human growth hormone (GH) (stage 3)
- Memory consolidation
- NREM (verbal)
- 2 NREM (procedural→ tasks)
- REM (emotional)
- Special Benefits of REM Sleep
- Mammals and birds
- Increases after learning
- Changes over lifespan (brain development)
- More REM as infant (exposed to many stimuli)
- 2-4 yrs → overproducing synapses
- REM deprivation
- REM rebound
- We have more REM when we have learned something that day
- Irritability
- Difficulty concentrating
Possible Functions of Dreaming
- REM & DMN continuum
- Daydreaming is positive, provides relief
3 reaons why we dream:
- Activation-synthesis theory
- What we dream about reflects the specific area of our brain that was active
- Neural network model
- Dream to try to forget info that is irrelevant
- Mental house keeping theory (deciding what memories to keep)
- Evolutionary model
- When stressed → dream more
- Amygdala more active during dreaming
- Falling or flying dream – vestibular system is overactivated
- Lucid dreaming
- Control of dreams
- 55% of adults have had a lucid dream
- Can train yourself
- Athletes trained
- They were supposed to have a dream about exercising
- Those who dreamt exercise showed some muscular development
- Nightmare
- During REM
- Negative intense emotional dream (story/theme)
- Sleep (night) terror
- Typically delta (deep sleep, stage 3)
- Random scary thought
Sleep-Wake Disorders
Major Depressive Disorder with Seasonal Pattern (seasonal affective disorder)
- Person mets criteria for major depression (5 symptoms for 2weeks, disruption of life)
- Cause: insufficient amount of daylight
- Decrease in serotonin–precursor to melatonin) → less melatonin
- Genetic variations
- Treatment
- Light therapy
- Impact of timing of light therapy
- Hard time waking up in morning →use in morning
Insomnia
- Most common sleep disorder
- Role of stress
- Stress is the most common cause
- Cant shut off the mind when wanting to sleep
- Onset
- Difficulty falling asleep
- Longer than 15 min to fall asleep when tired (episode can occur)
- Maintenance
- Fall asleep okay but can not stay asleep
- Pseudo insomia
- False
- States that they can not fall asleep
- But when in sleep study they are asleep
- Dream that they are awake
- Tx
- Natural
- Sleep hygiene
- Sleep at same time
- Avoid screen time
- No caffeine before sleep
- Avoid exercise before sleep
- Get up at the same time
- Bedroom is really only for sleep
- Medical
- Ambien
- Melatonin
- Go to bed later, when actually tired → reset circadian rhythm
Narcolepsy
- Sleep attack → fall asleep without intending to
- Fairly brief
- Happens every 2-3 hrs
- Results from disruptions in the synthesis of receptors for orexin
- Episodes
- Immediate REM sleep
- Additional symptoms
- Sleep paralysis
- Dream while awake
- Hypnagogic: dreaming before falling asleep
- Hypnopompic: dreaming after “waking”
- Muscle paralysis while awake → cataplexy
Breathing-Related Sleep Disorders
- Obstructive sleep apnea (hypopnea—shallow breathing)
- Stop breathing / pathways close
- 100s of episodes in the night
- Intense snoring
- Sleep on back, overweight, more common in males, increased risk of heart disease and strokes
- Breathing machine tx
- Central sleep apnea
- Area of brain that controls breathing (medulla) does not function properly during sleep
- 1-2 min
- Possibly stimulation of brain for tx
SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome)
- Ages 2-4 months
- Position for sleeping
- On their back, in their crib
- Breastfeeding
- Lower risk of SIDS if child is breastfed, opposed to bottle fed
- Cigarette smoke
- Overcrowding
- Environment, crowded apartment, lots of stuff in baby bed (increases risk)
- Winter
- More likely to happen in^ also in a premature birth
Sleep talking (Somniloquy)
- Age
- More common in grade school to high school
- Happens in the lighter stages of REM & NREM
- Respond to external stimuli
Sleep walking (somnambulism)
- Most common in 4-12 year olds
- Delta NREM (deep sleep)
- Genetic link
- Can increase with stress
REM Sleep Behavior Disorder
- Lack of paralysis
- Inherited or brain damage (pons)
Restless Leg Syndrome (RLS)
- Regular movements during sleep
CHAPTER 14 - SOCIAL & AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Components of Emotion
- Physiological
- Heart rate, breathing, body temp
- Behavior
- Facial expression, interact w someone else
- Thought
- Ideas, beliefs, influence emotion, perspective will have significant impact
- Conscious, subjective experience
- Emotions are personal
- Worse if message (“you shouldn’t feel that way”) is received by child → child will doubt emotions
Evolution & Adaptive Benefits of Emotion
- Energy creation
- Emotions help with general arousal, and ability to respond
- Yerkes-Dodson
- Want a moderate amount of anxiety
- Direction of movement
- Positive (toward)
- Negative (away)
- Emotions and nonverbal communication
- Facial expression (survivial value)
- Guides bx (from own expression and others)
- Body language
Models of Emotion
- James-Lange Theory of Emotion
STIMULUS >>> autonomic nervous system (ANS) AROUSAL >>> EMOTION
- Imitation of facial expression & empathy
- Imitating facial expressions increases empathy
- Catharsis
- Purging of emotion
- Rumination
- Sitting in one’s own thoughts and feelings (bad)
- Flaw to theory
- Not distinct physical sensation for each emotion
- Example for “crossing the bridge” study
- Male participants interviewed by female interviewer
- Control: at the park
- Tx: on a high suspension bridge
- The tx group attributed the increase in heart rate being attracted to the interviewer
- Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotion
- Stimulus → ANS arousal and feeling
- Simultaneously
- independent
- Schachter-Singer Two factor Theory of Emotion
Stimulus → ANS arousal → Cognitive apprasial → feeling
- Cognitive appraisal
- Why is the ANS aroused
- Dog chasing you → heart rate increase → my dog? Random dog? → happiness or fear
Contemporary Theories of Emotion
- Use both James-Lange & Schachter-Singer
- James-Lange
- Precise physical sensation
- Immediate reponse
- Schachter-Singer
- Ambiguous physical sensation
- Delayed response
- Somatic markers
- Feeling associated with paricular/ prior experience
- Subjective feeling mapped as positive/ negative
Controlling Facial Expression
- Use whole body
- Emphasis on face (especially eyes), face module infants
- Begins in infancy
- Programmed to pay attention to faces
- Cranial nerves
- Facial nerve
- Superficial nerves (skin, facial expression)
- Trigeminal nerve
- Deeper nerves (bones of the head, chewing food & speaking)
- Upper vs. lower facial nerves (impact - damage to nerves)
- Upper third bilateral control
- Lower 2/3rds contralateral
- Major pathways
- Primary motor cortex
- Voluntary, volitional facial paresis
- A person asks you to smile
- Subcortical system
- Spontaneous, emotional facial paresis
Biological Contributions to Emotional Expression
- 8 basic emotions & expressions
- All cultures and throughout time
- Impact of blindness
- Blind individual still expresses emotions
- Impact of isolation
Environmental Contributions to Emotional Expression
- Training
- Show or not show emotions
- Doctor
- Regulate emotions to keep patient calm
- Presence of others
- More intense positive emotions when with others
- Less intense negative emotions when with others
- Cultural display rules
- Japanese vs. American
- Americans are more open to show emotions/expressions in public
- Japan is taught to regulate emotions in front of other people/ in public
- Increase in emotions when alone
Individual Differences in Emotional Expression & Recognition
- Begins in infancy
- Highly reactivity to environmental stimuli → difficult temperment
- Extremely low reactivity to environmental stimuli → slow to warm up temperment
- Disorders associated with low ability to understand facial expression
- Antisocial personality disorder
- Schizophrenia
- autism
Lie Detection
- Signs
- Change in body movements
- More “um” and “uh”
- Less story detail
- Tell story backwards
- No Duchenne smile
- No eye movement/expression during smile
- Polygraph
- Respiration, sweating, blood pressure
Autonomic Nervous System & Emotion
General arousal
- Areas of the brain & emotion
- Amygdala
- Initiates arousal, and processes stimuli
- Fear, anxiety, and aggression
- Lesion vs stimulation
- Insula
- Where frontal and temporal lobe
- Discriminate between positive and negative stimuli
- Anterior cignulate cortex
- More conscious appraisals about threat
- Information about physical pain, reward, and decision making
- Basil ganglia
- Recognizing facial expression (disgust)
- Most people have asymmetrical faces
- Coordination of movement
- Respond to emotional stimuli
- Cerbral cortex
- Forntal lobe and anxiety
- When we think about events with anxiety, levels of anxiety decrease
- Left cerbral hemisphere
- Processes more positive emotions
- Right cerebral hemisphere
- Processes more negative emotions
- Focus more positive/gratitude→easier to remember positive events
- Lateralization of right cerebral hemisphere
- Overall, right processes more emotions than the left
- Naturally focus more on the negative
- Negative emotions tend to be more powerful→ tendency to focus on the negative
- Patterns of activation & emotion
- Stress and stressors
- Stress: unpleasant and disruptive state from the perception of danger (state of needing to adjust)
- Eustress: “the spice of life”; type of stress that + your ability to function. Positive short term stress, helps you get stuff done, beneficial
- Distress “kiss of death”; a state in which your ability to function is compromised
- Event itself
- Major event (new job, death, marriage)
- Daily hassle (minor, common occurrence
- Accumulcation can be very stressful
- Can be more stressful than major event
- Conflict
- Approach-approach
- Avoidance-avoidance
- 2 options, you dont like either one
- Approach-avoidance
- 2 options, like 1 don't like 1
Situations w positives and neg
Stress- Hans Selye & General Adaptation Syndrome
- Walter Cannon’s fight-or-flight
- Quick, immediate response to stressor
- (tend & befriend)
- Stressor → seek support from others
- Females more likely to respond this way
- Males protectors → fight or flight
- Females nurture → seek support
- Selye’s theory
- Alarm
- Fight of flight (is just the first stage)
- Resistance
- Exhaustion
Responses to Stress
- Coordinate physical, cognitive, and behavioral
- Activation of SNS
- Hypothalamus activates endocrine system
- Use energy to flee or fight
Stress & the Amygdala
- Helps with determining threat
- Thalamus >>> amygdala (emotion of fear)
- Thalamus >>> cortex (determine cause of fear) (C→C)
Stress, SAM, & HPA
- Sympathetic adrenal-medullary
- Hypothalamus >> SNS >> adrenal (adrenaline & norepinephrine)
- Immediate response, short-lived
- Fight or flight response
- Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
- Amygdala >> hypothalamus (corticotrophin-releasing hormone & vasopressin) >> pituitary (adrenocorticotropic hormone) >> adrenal (cortisol)
- Slower, last longer (cortisol 3 hours)
- Hippocampus – inhibit CRH if too high
- Stress and immune system
- SAM → immune system is enhanced
- HPA → immune system is supressed
Stress & Epigenetics
- Highly attentive rat mothers
- Sensitive to cortisol levels
- Respond appropriately; beneficial
- Lower hormonal and bx response
- Low attentive rat mothers
- Low sensitivity to hormone levels
- Much longer time for those hormone levels to return to normal
- Not licking, not nurturing
Stress, the Immune System, & Health
- Stress hormones
- Suppress activity of lymphocytes
- B lymphocytes (vaccinations)
- Release antibodies, programmed to fight specific antigens
- T lymphocytes
- Cancer cells and other antigens
- Type A vs. Type B
- Type A: competitive, time conscious, productivity, difficulty relaxing
- Cynical, chronic hostility (i.e, road rage)
- Greater health problems
- Type B: laid back, eb n flow
- Chronic stress
- Greater suppression of immune system
- Cortisol
- Increase blood pressue
- Increase fat release
Aggression & Violence
- Types of aggression
- Premeditated: planning, proactive (youre the one who starts it)
- Impulsive: hot aggression, reactive (someone else has initiated and we respond)
Genetics, Environment, Epigenetics, & Aggression
- Genetic link
- Aggression can be bred
- Heritability of impulsive agression
- Epigenetics
- Interaction b/w levels of monoamine (dopamine) oxidase A & child maltreatment
- Low levels of enzyme & high levels of child maltreatment → antisocial bx
- Low levels of enzymes & NO child maltreatment → no antisocial bx
- Environment
- Breakdown of social institutions (marriage)
- Culture where divorce is common and not stigmatized
- Focus on function of partents after divorce (parenting)
- Community support
- As communities are getting more crowded, people are keeping to themselves
Brain Structures and Aggression
- Hypothalamus
- Stimulation of medial (violent) vs. lateral (hunting)
- Removal of cerbral cortices
- Inhibit hypothalamus → “sham rage” (violent, uncontrolled, undirected rage)
- Amygdala
- Anterior cingulate cortex
- Inhibit aggressive bx
- Lesion→ can not inhibit
- Orbitofrontal cortex
- Inhibit aggressive bx
- Lesion→ can not inhibit
Biochemistry & Aggression
- Alcohol use
- Alters ability of ACC & OFC to inhibit aggression
- “Agreesive drunks” know what to watch out for
- Testosterone
- Increase reactivity to threats (males & females)
- Rats (castrated or adminstered)
- Serotonin
- Facilitates activity of ACC & OFC
- Encourage empathy?
Pleasure & Reward (From Chapter 9)
- Classical Research in Self-Stimulation
- Olds & Milner (1954)
- Wire electrode in rat’s brain
- Intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS)
- Would spend most time rewarding self
- Routtenberg & Lindy (1965)
- 2 levers (food or ICSS)
- Choice of ICSS
- Humans- septal area of brain (reward center)
- Rewards Pathway
- Natural stimulation of area
- Unnatural behaviors
- Dopamine
- Amount released
- Amount of blocking
- Cortical Processing of Reward
- Ability to delay gratification
- Distant vs. immediate
- Much more successful if can delay
- Implication of anterior cingulate cortex
- Cost-benefit decisions (assign value)
- Orbitofrontal cortex
- Damage leads to poor decisions
- Linked to antisocial personality disorder (not thinking about consequences)
- Prefrontal cortex