SEARCH
You are in browse mode. You must login to use MEMORY

   Log in to start

Biopsychology Motivation and internal regulation


🇬🇧
In English
Created:


Public
Created by:
Miaad4


0 / 5  (0 ratings)



» To start learning, click login

1 / 25

[Front]


How does sleep work?
[Back]


animals have rhythms that correspond to functional activity of animal

Practice Known Questions

Stay up to date with your due questions

Complete 5 questions to enable practice

Exams

Exam: Test your skills

Test your skills in exam mode

Learn New Questions

Dynamic Modes

SmartIntelligent mix of all modes
CustomUse settings to weight dynamic modes

Manual Mode [BETA]

Select your own question and answer types
Specific modes

Learn with flashcards
Complete the sentence
Listening & SpellingSpelling: Type what you hear
multiple choiceMultiple choice mode
SpeakingAnswer with voice
Speaking & ListeningPractice pronunciation
TypingTyping only mode

Biopsychology Motivation and internal regulation - Leaderboard

0 users have completed this course. Be the first!

No users have played this course yet, be the first


Biopsychology Motivation and internal regulation - Details

Levels:

Questions:

40 questions
🇬🇧🇬🇧
How does sleep work?
Animals have rhythms that correspond to functional activity of animal
Biological clock
Rhythm is a response to an external stimulus animals have an internal mechanism
What is the Endogenous circadian rhythms?
Internally controlled cycles that last about a day
Evidence for circadian rhythms:
If you stay up all night, you feel sleepier as it gets later but perk up a bit in the morning animals kept in total darkness still keep to a 24h cycle humans kept in an environment with a 28hr cycle cannot synchronise, and go back to 24hr cycle blind and deaf animals have normal circadian rhythms
What does the SCN brain area do?
Damage to SCN = damage to circadian rhythms remove SCN and keep tissue culture and it continues to produce 24hr rhythm of action potentials hamsters who had a 20hr SCN implanted started to live a 20hr cycle
How does SCN control circadian rhythms?
Controls the pineal gland = endocrine hormone behind thalamus releases melatonin = hormone makes us sleepy
Upsetting the biological clock
Internal clock but responds to environment feedback system between world and clock allows adaptation stimulus that changes the clock is called 'zeitgeber' good for changes in seasons
What is the zetigeber?
Means 'time giver' for most land mammals = zeitgeber is light but also respond to exercise, noise, temp, meals some marine mammals respond to tides
How does jet lag disrupt rhythms?
Disruption by crossing time zones sleeping at wrong times, depression, lack of concentration, nausea mismatch between bio clock and external stimuli
What is a phase delay and phase advance?
Phase delay: delaying your sleep - easier phase advance: sleeping earlier
How does shift work disrupt rhythms?
Even after years of shift work, people still have disruptive sleep patterns feel fatigued can't sleep well during the day don't adjust well to working at night
Why is light so important?
Small branch of optic nerve goes straight to SCN comes from special ganglion cells special photopigment, melanopsin (not rods or cones) respond directly to lights respond slowly and turn off slowly so SCN can gauge the time of day
How can stages of sleep be detected?
With an EEG eeg can detect electrical signals of spontaneous brain activity
Describe the 4 stages of sleep:
Stage 1 and 2: irregular activity, high but declining, bursts of activity in stage 2, cortex still receiving sensory light stage 3 and 4: slow wave sleep (SWS) = neuronal activity is highly synchronised, sensory input reduced
What is REM sleep?
90min cycles rapid eye movement also called paradoxical sleep neither light nor deep sleep light because lots of brain activity deep because muscles are relaxed
What is the brain doing during REM?
Lateral geniculate nucleus in the thalamus (limbic system) = emotions Pons (brainstem) = 'bridge' axons from cortex to spinal cord = movement (inhibits)
What happens when you lesion the pons?
Did this to cats cats still had REM sleep but muscles not relaxed chased prey
What is the insomnia sleeping disorder?
Stress, anxiety, depression shifting circadian rhythms dependence on sleeping pills
What is sleep apnea sleeping disorder?
Inability to breathe while sleeping due to obesity or old age?
What is narcolepsy sleeping disorder?
Attacks of sleepiness during the day REM during the day?
What is the periodic limb movement disorder?
Involuntary movement of the legs/arms maybe something to do with pons?
Function of sleep?
A form of hibernation? conserving energy when you can't get much done - food is scarce, light is too light/low hibernating hamsters live longer than other hamsters
Animals vary in how much sleep depending on:
Safety from predators how much time they need to find food whether they need to surface for air
Where does lack of sleep lead?
Causes dizziness, hallucinations etc eventually the immune system shuts down in severely deprived animals more sleep enhances memory
Facts about REM sleep
We spend 1/5 sleep in REM sleep emotional activity during REM if deprived, the brain attempts REM during waking hours babies have more REM sleep than adults mammals and birds have REM sleep must be a biological function
Why do we need sleep? what is it for?
To strengthen memories - weed out pointless connections sleep overall improves memory anti-depressant drugs (MAO inhibitors) reduce REM and people have memory problems
Dreaming: The activation - synthesis hypothesis:
Effort to make sense of distorted info PGO waves from Pons activate parts of cortex, which synthesises a story but not always in REM
Dreaming: The clinico-anatomical hypothesis:
Dreaming is thinking senses are supressed, so brain left to own devices motor cortex suppressed so no action pre-frontal cortex suppressed so no working memory to piece together a believable story
Temperature regulation:
To regulate temperature, humans: sweat shiver blood vessel constriction blood vessel dilation pre-optic area: near hypothalamus - changes in its own temp, and temp receptors in skin
Thirst:
Humans have flexible strategies depending on circumstances if water is scarce - pituitary gland releases vasopressin blood vessels constrict raises blood pressure and compensates for the flow fluid volume vasopressin is an antidiuretic hormone (ADH) - makes urine more concentrated
Why do hangovers make us thirsty?
Drinking alcohol blocks production of vasopressin by pituitary gland prevents kidneys absorbing water makes urine more diluted morning after experience massive widespread dehydration - hence very thirsty
Hunger: how do we know what to eat?
Combination of learned and unlearned strategies learned from peers, culture but innate tastes are essential likeness of sweet food, disgust for bitter/sour
Hunger: how do we know when to eat?
Hypothalamus (associated with regulating behaviours) has neurons sensitive to hunger and feeling full these feeding mechanisms seem to have changed very little from mammalian times many areas involved so can make errors, but can also be compensated
Eating disorders: Obesity
Problem in industrialised countries huge cultural influence social aspect of eating in our biology - tendency to like fatty foods some genetic disorders
Eating disorders: Anorexia nervosa:
Unwillingness to eat 0.3% of young women perception of fatness even when thin body deterioration, muscle wasting, death unlikely to be genetic serious condition
Eating disorder: bulimia nervosa:
Extreme dieting mixed with binge eating vomit after meals imbalance of hormones associated with feeding but may result in erratic eating rather than cause
How does our sex and gender affect our behaviour - evolutionary theory:
We are the product of successful strategies, so should have inherited successful strategies men and women were subject to different selection pressures in evolutionary history - therefore exhibit different traits
Reproductive behaviours:
Men and women differ: sexual strategies - reproductive behaviour Mate choice, attitude to sexual behaviour
Reproductive behaviours men vs women
Men: numerous mobile sperm; potential to father many offspring more promiscuous women: few immobile eggs; maximum 20 in a lifetime the 'choosy' sex 'evolutionary battle of the sexes'
Sexual strategies: role of hormones:
Men: androgens (testosterone) produced in testes and the adrenal gland sensitises regions of the brain underlying sexual motivation removal of the testes (i.e. cancer) results in decreased sex drive, but still some production in brain women: oestrogen produced by ovaries and androgens produced by adrenal gland androgens associated with sex drive postmenopausal women can still have high sex drive due to androgen production