Chapter 2 - Biology of Mind & Consciousness
A. Central Nervous System
Brain
Spinal Cord
B. Peripheral Nervous System
Somatic Nervous System
Sensory Input
Motor Output (Voluntary)
Autonomic Nervous System
Sympathetic - fight or flight; stress (immediate)
Parasympathetic - resting/healing response (after)
Three Types of Neurons in the NS:
Sensory
Motor
Interneuron
Sequence:
Dendrites
Threshold
Action Potential
Cell Body
Axon
Myelin Sheath
Axon terminal
Neurotransmitter
Synapse
Receptor Sites on Dendrites
The body’s other communication system
Slower, but usually long-lasting effects
Secrete hormones into bloodstream
e.g., Pituitary gland
The “Master Gland”
Controlled by the hypothalamus
Influences growth and release of other hormones
Adrenal glands
Involved in stress response (sympathetic activation)
Release epinephrine/adrenaline (increase heart rate, blood pressure, blood sugar)
Brain Stem
Medulla (auto)
Reticular Formation
Thalamus
Cerebellum
controls muscle movements
Amygdala
aggression, anger, afraid
Hypothalamus
Hippocampus
Temporal
Occipital
Parietal
Frontal
Motor Cortex
Somatosensory Cortex
Association Areas
Consciousness - awareness of ourselves and our environment
Consciousness - selective attention to ongoing perceptions, thoughts, and feelings
Selective Attention - the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
Consciousness = “tip of the iceberg”
Change Blindness - Failing to notice changes in the environment
Practical implications
People vastly overestimate their ability to detect change in their environment
This research is one aspect of inattentional blindness
Circadian Rhythm - “regular bodily rhythms… that occur on a 24-hour cycle” (pg. 57)
Jet Lag - an individual’s internal rhythms are temporarily out of sync with the environment around. them
Symptoms of Jet Lag - changes in sleep, appetite, mood, motivation, energy levels, susceptibility to illness, etc.
Jet lag is worse when you go to the East over going to the West
The more time zones you cross, the greater the difficulty in adjusting
Recommendations to combat jet lag:
A few days before, start adjusting your schedule to fit the destination
Change your watch when on the plane
When arrived, match the schedule of your destination
The next day, stay out in the sun
Monitored by electroencephalogram (EEG) - “a test that detects electrical activity in your brain using small, flat metal discs (electrodes) attached to your scalp” (mayoclinic.org)
NREM-1 (Non-Rapid Eye Movement)
Light sleep
Hypnagogic sensations - being startled awake while drifting to sleep
NREM-2
NREM-3
Difficult to awaken - sleep walking/talking, etc. can happen
REM (Paradoxical Sleeping)
More rapid brain waves -- brain waves slow down through 1-3, but perk up in REM
Increased heart rate, rapid & irregular breathing, darting eyes (~30 secs), minimal muscle activity
Body is completely still, except eyes
Dreams happen
More alert if woken up in REM
Stages repeat every ~90 mins
Briefer NREM-3; Longer NREM-2 & REM as the night goes on
Narcolepsy - characterized by “uncontrollable sleep attacks, sometimes lapsing directly into REM sleep” (pg.63)
National Institute of Health (NIH) definition: “A chronic neurological disorder caused by the brain’s inability to regulate sleep-wake cycles normally”
Sleep tends to be short (few seconds to several minutes, rare cases an hour or more)
Cataplexy (sudden loss of muscle tone)
Vivid hallucinations
Brief, total, paralysis at beginning and end
Sometimes fall asleep without realizing it
Often triggered by intense emotion
Unknown cause
No cure or complete remission of symptoms
Medications might help - (uppers and sometimes anti-depressants help symptoms)
Sleep Apnea - “characterized by temporary cessations of breathing during sleep and repeated momentary awakenings”
Literally “cessation of respiration” (breathing stops)
Breathing pauses can last from a few seconds to a couple of minutes
Maybe 30+ times and hour
Often not diagnosed
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) -- often with clinically overweight/obese people & kids with enlarged tonsils (snoring)
Central sleep apnea -- CNS struggles with talking to diaphragm and lungs to keep working (stopping breathing)
change sleeping position
Avoid CNS depressants (alcohol, sleeping pills)
Lose weight
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
Surgery -- (resetting of jaw can help)
Respiratory stimulants
A. Central Nervous System
Brain
Spinal Cord
B. Peripheral Nervous System
Somatic Nervous System
Sensory Input
Motor Output (Voluntary)
Autonomic Nervous System
Sympathetic - fight or flight; stress (immediate)
Parasympathetic - resting/healing response (after)
Three Types of Neurons in the NS:
Sensory
Motor
Interneuron
Sequence:
Dendrites
Threshold
Action Potential
Cell Body
Axon
Myelin Sheath
Axon terminal
Neurotransmitter
Synapse
Receptor Sites on Dendrites
The body’s other communication system
Slower, but usually long-lasting effects
Secrete hormones into bloodstream
e.g., Pituitary gland
The “Master Gland”
Controlled by the hypothalamus
Influences growth and release of other hormones
Adrenal glands
Involved in stress response (sympathetic activation)
Release epinephrine/adrenaline (increase heart rate, blood pressure, blood sugar)
Brain Stem
Medulla (auto)
Reticular Formation
Thalamus
Cerebellum
controls muscle movements
Amygdala
aggression, anger, afraid
Hypothalamus
Hippocampus
Temporal
Occipital
Parietal
Frontal
Motor Cortex
Somatosensory Cortex
Association Areas
Consciousness - awareness of ourselves and our environment
Consciousness - selective attention to ongoing perceptions, thoughts, and feelings
Selective Attention - the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
Consciousness = “tip of the iceberg”
Change Blindness - Failing to notice changes in the environment
Practical implications
People vastly overestimate their ability to detect change in their environment
This research is one aspect of inattentional blindness
Circadian Rhythm - “regular bodily rhythms… that occur on a 24-hour cycle” (pg. 57)
Jet Lag - an individual’s internal rhythms are temporarily out of sync with the environment around. them
Symptoms of Jet Lag - changes in sleep, appetite, mood, motivation, energy levels, susceptibility to illness, etc.
Jet lag is worse when you go to the East over going to the West
The more time zones you cross, the greater the difficulty in adjusting
Recommendations to combat jet lag:
A few days before, start adjusting your schedule to fit the destination
Change your watch when on the plane
When arrived, match the schedule of your destination
The next day, stay out in the sun
Monitored by electroencephalogram (EEG) - “a test that detects electrical activity in your brain using small, flat metal discs (electrodes) attached to your scalp” (mayoclinic.org)
NREM-1 (Non-Rapid Eye Movement)
Light sleep
Hypnagogic sensations - being startled awake while drifting to sleep
NREM-2
NREM-3
Difficult to awaken - sleep walking/talking, etc. can happen
REM (Paradoxical Sleeping)
More rapid brain waves -- brain waves slow down through 1-3, but perk up in REM
Increased heart rate, rapid & irregular breathing, darting eyes (~30 secs), minimal muscle activity
Body is completely still, except eyes
Dreams happen
More alert if woken up in REM
Stages repeat every ~90 mins
Briefer NREM-3; Longer NREM-2 & REM as the night goes on
Narcolepsy - characterized by “uncontrollable sleep attacks, sometimes lapsing directly into REM sleep” (pg.63)
National Institute of Health (NIH) definition: “A chronic neurological disorder caused by the brain’s inability to regulate sleep-wake cycles normally”
Sleep tends to be short (few seconds to several minutes, rare cases an hour or more)
Cataplexy (sudden loss of muscle tone)
Vivid hallucinations
Brief, total, paralysis at beginning and end
Sometimes fall asleep without realizing it
Often triggered by intense emotion
Unknown cause
No cure or complete remission of symptoms
Medications might help - (uppers and sometimes anti-depressants help symptoms)
Sleep Apnea - “characterized by temporary cessations of breathing during sleep and repeated momentary awakenings”
Literally “cessation of respiration” (breathing stops)
Breathing pauses can last from a few seconds to a couple of minutes
Maybe 30+ times and hour
Often not diagnosed
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) -- often with clinically overweight/obese people & kids with enlarged tonsils (snoring)
Central sleep apnea -- CNS struggles with talking to diaphragm and lungs to keep working (stopping breathing)
change sleeping position
Avoid CNS depressants (alcohol, sleeping pills)
Lose weight
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
Surgery -- (resetting of jaw can help)
Respiratory stimulants