Unit 4: States of Consciousness
Read Chapter 5 and 11 in your text, watch videos, take notes from speakers and outside readings.
Concepts and terms:
consciousness
selective attention
cocktail party effect
altered state of consciousness
day dream
unconsciousness
preconscious
suppresion
repression
circadian rhythms
jet lag
sleep
second wind
activation synthesis hypothesis
beta wave
alpha wave
theta wave
delta wave
stage 1
hypnagogic state
stage 2
k-complexes
sleep spindles
stage 3
transition stage
stage 4
slow wave sleep
REM
Nrem
rem rebound
sleep deprivation
dream
latent content
manifest content
hypersomnias
parasomnias
insomnia
sleep apnea
bed wetting (enuresis)
sleep walking and talking
nightmares
narcolepsy
night terrors
rem sleep disorder
SIDS
hypnosis
the Nancy School
posthypnotic suggestion
age regression
animal magnetism
posthypnotic amnesia
dissociation
mesmerized
false or implanted memories
leading questions
fantasy prone
pain relief
meditation
drugs
intoxication
addiction
tolerance
reverse tolerance
depressants
alcohol
opioids
stimulants
amphetamines
cocaine
substance abuse
detoxification
narcotics
psychoactive drugs
hallucinogens
hallucination
delusion
biofeedback
supernatural explanations
Id
ego
superego
Psychosexual stages of Development
oral stage
anal stage
phallic stage
latency stage
genital stage
defense mechanisms
repression
regression
rationalization
displacement
projection
reaction formation
denial
sublimation
pleasure principle
libido
reality principle
moral principle
eros
Oedipus Complex
Electra Complex
People:
J. Allen Hobson
Robert McCarely
Donald Broadbent
Ed Ray
Jean-Martin Charcot
Franz Anton Mesmer
Stephen La Berge
Sigmund Freud
Carl Jung
Alex Grey
Brian Connor
Jack Schwarz
Dmitri Mendeleev
Mary Shelley
Friedrich August Kekule
Elias Howe
Keith Hearne
Antii Revonsuo
Thomas Birt
Alex Honnold
Questions-
1. Read through the truth or fiction questions at the beginning of the chapter.
2. What is consciousness?
3. What might be some of the functions fo sleep?
4. What are a few examples of circadian rhythms?
5. What are a couple of theories about why we dream?
6. What are some of the ways that people alter their consciousness?
7. What are some of the effects alcohol use and abuse have on a person?
8. What are some of the reasons that people use alcohol?
9. What are some of the common and not so common problems we have in sleep?
10. What are the major stages of sleep? What are some of the activities that occur at each stage?
11. What might be the purpose or advantages of day dreaming?
12. How might hypnosis work? and what might it do for us?
13. What can biofeedback do for us?
14. What is a lucid dream? What might they be able to do for us?
Skills and Activities-
1. Complete the dream journal activity.
2. Complete the biofeedback activity.
3. Read the lucid dreaming packet.
4. The student will be able to indentify sleep stages by knowing brain wave speeds.
5. Read "controversy" case study on pag 220 and think about the marijuana debate.
6. Read the "in profile" section on page 202 and think about Franz Anton Mesmer's impact.
7. Complete the why people drink survey on page 212.
8. Understand the sleeping charts on pages 191,192, 194-195.
9. Match sleep stages with events related to those stages.
Read Chapter 5 and 11 in your text, watch videos, take notes from speakers and outside readings.
Concepts and terms:
consciousness
selective attention
cocktail party effect
altered state of consciousness
day dream
unconsciousness
preconscious
suppresion
repression
circadian rhythms
jet lag
sleep
second wind
activation synthesis hypothesis
beta wave
alpha wave
theta wave
delta wave
stage 1
hypnagogic state
stage 2
k-complexes
sleep spindles
stage 3
transition stage
stage 4
slow wave sleep
REM
Nrem
rem rebound
sleep deprivation
dream
latent content
manifest content
hypersomnias
parasomnias
insomnia
sleep apnea
bed wetting (enuresis)
sleep walking and talking
nightmares
narcolepsy
night terrors
rem sleep disorder
SIDS
hypnosis
the Nancy School
posthypnotic suggestion
age regression
animal magnetism
posthypnotic amnesia
dissociation
mesmerized
false or implanted memories
leading questions
fantasy prone
pain relief
meditation
drugs
intoxication
addiction
tolerance
reverse tolerance
depressants
alcohol
opioids
stimulants
amphetamines
cocaine
substance abuse
detoxification
narcotics
psychoactive drugs
hallucinogens
hallucination
delusion
biofeedback
supernatural explanations
Id
ego
superego
Psychosexual stages of Development
oral stage
anal stage
phallic stage
latency stage
genital stage
defense mechanisms
repression
regression
rationalization
displacement
projection
reaction formation
denial
sublimation
pleasure principle
libido
reality principle
moral principle
eros
Oedipus Complex
Electra Complex
People:
J. Allen Hobson
Robert McCarely
Donald Broadbent
Ed Ray
Jean-Martin Charcot
Franz Anton Mesmer
Stephen La Berge
Sigmund Freud
Carl Jung
Alex Grey
Brian Connor
Jack Schwarz
Dmitri Mendeleev
Mary Shelley
Friedrich August Kekule
Elias Howe
Keith Hearne
Antii Revonsuo
Thomas Birt
Alex Honnold
Questions-
1. Read through the truth or fiction questions at the beginning of the chapter.
2. What is consciousness?
3. What might be some of the functions fo sleep?
4. What are a few examples of circadian rhythms?
5. What are a couple of theories about why we dream?
6. What are some of the ways that people alter their consciousness?
7. What are some of the effects alcohol use and abuse have on a person?
8. What are some of the reasons that people use alcohol?
9. What are some of the common and not so common problems we have in sleep?
10. What are the major stages of sleep? What are some of the activities that occur at each stage?
11. What might be the purpose or advantages of day dreaming?
12. How might hypnosis work? and what might it do for us?
13. What can biofeedback do for us?
14. What is a lucid dream? What might they be able to do for us?
Skills and Activities-
1. Complete the dream journal activity.
2. Complete the biofeedback activity.
3. Read the lucid dreaming packet.
4. The student will be able to indentify sleep stages by knowing brain wave speeds.
5. Read "controversy" case study on pag 220 and think about the marijuana debate.
6. Read the "in profile" section on page 202 and think about Franz Anton Mesmer's impact.
7. Complete the why people drink survey on page 212.
8. Understand the sleeping charts on pages 191,192, 194-195.
9. Match sleep stages with events related to those stages.