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Page 1: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 2: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 3: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 4: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological rhythms

1. Circannual

2. Infradian

3. Circadian (Latin: Circa = “around”, dian = “day”)

– Zeitgeber: “time giver”– Entrainment: alignment of rhythm with external cues

e.g., suprachiasmatic nucleus and sunlight

Page 5: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 6: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 7: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 8: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Clocks

– Suprachiasmatic nucleus• A nucleus situated atop the optic chiasm responsible for

organizing circadian rhythms.

– Pineal gland• A gland attached to the dorsal tectum; produces melatonin and

plays a role in circadian and seasonal rhythms.

Page 9: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Suprachiasmatic Nucleus

– Part of hypothalamus– Damage disrupts rhythm.

Page 10: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 11: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Retinohypothalamic pathway

Page 12: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Pineal Gland

– Rene Decartes Treatise of man (1640)- “principal seat of the rational soul”

– releases melatonin (at night)– melatonin is derived from

serotonin

Page 13: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 14: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 15: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Functions of sleep

• Universal phenomenon among vertebrates.• Only warm-blooded vertebrates (mammals and birds) exhibit

REM sleep.• Essential to survival.• Improves memory.• Conserve energy resources.• Recuperate physically.

Page 16: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Sleep Deprivation

• Restorative effects of sleep appear to be more important for brain than rest of body.

• Deprivation does not appear to interfere with ability to perform physical exercise.

• Cognitive abilities can affected by sleep deprivation.• Brain rests during slow-wave sleep.• Mental activity during the day increases slow-wave

sleep at night.

Page 17: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Rebound phenomenon

• REM sleep increases after a period of REM sleep deprivation.

Page 18: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 19: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 20: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

EEG

1. Frequency of the wave (n of peaks/unit time)– tells you about the number of cortical

neurons generating EPSPs

2. Amplitude of the wave (height of wave)– tells us about the n of EPSPs that occur at the same

point in time– n of neurons firing in synchrony

Page 21: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

– Alpha activity• A smooth electrical activity of 8–12 Hz recorded from

the brain; associated with relaxation.

– Beta activity• Irregular electrical activity of 13–30 Hz recorded from

the brain; associated with arousal.

– Theta activity• EEG activity of 3.5-7.5 Hz that occurs intermittently during early stages of

slow-wave and REM sleep.

– Delta activity• Regular, synchronous electrical activity of less than

4 Hz recorded from the brain; occurs during deep sleep.

EEG Wave Types

Page 22: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 23: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 24: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

– REM sleep• Desynchronized EEG activity during sleep; associated with

dreaming, rapid eye movements, and muscular paralysis.

– Non-REM sleep• All stages of sleep except REM sleep.

– Slow-wave sleep• Non-REM sleep, characterized by synchronized EEG activity

during deeper stages.

Stages of Sleep

Page 25: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Inc.

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Page 26: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Characteristics of REM sleep

• low amplitude, high frequency desynchronous EEG• rapid eye movement (REM)• lower species show more REM sleep, as do human infants• narrative dreams • muscle atonia

– motor cortex active but descending motor pathways paralyzed

• penile erections and vaginal secretions• deepest stage?

– incorporate things into our dreams– more likely to spontaneously awaken

Page 27: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e
Page 28: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 29: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Sigmund Freud (1900) Interpretation of Dreams

water = birthflying = sexual arousalknifes, swords = castration anxietymud = fecescave, hallway = mother

Page 30: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

– Freud• Repressed memories and expression of libido.

– Activation synthesis theory• Sensory experiences are fabricated by the cortex as a means

of interpreting signals from the PGO activity.

– Continual activation theory• Encoding of short term procedural memories into long-term

memories.

Dream theories

Page 31: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 32: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Sleep is not a passive process

Cerveau isole • mesencephalon transection• continuous sleep

Encephale isole• brainstem transection• permanent insomnia

Page 33: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Sleep/Waking “Flip-Flop”

vlPOA= ventrolateral preoptic areaACh = acetylcholineNE = norepinephrine5-HT = serotonin

Page 34: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Ventrolateral Preoptic Area

GABA neurons• Activation promotes sleep.• Destruction results in total insomnia.

Page 35: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Locus Coeruleus

Norepinephrine neurons• Located in the pons near the rostral end of the floor of the

fourth ventricle.• Involved in arousal and vigilance. • Decreased activity during sleep (both slow-wave and REM)

Page 36: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Locus coeruleus

Page 37: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

– Acetylcholine• Cholinergic neurons located in the pons and basal forebrain produce

activation and cortical desynchrony.

– Serotonin (5-HT)• Appears to play a role in activating behavior.

– Histamine• Neurotransmitter that increases wakefulness and arousal; found in

tuberomammillary nucleus of hypothalamus, just rostral to mammillary bodies.

– Hypocretin (orexin)• A peptide produced by neurons whose cell bodies are located in the

hypothalamus and project to arousal mechanisms; destruction causes narcolepsy.

Page 38: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Neural control of REM sleep

– PGO wave (pontine, geniculate, occipital):• Bursts of phasic electrical activity originating in the pons,

followed by activity in the lateral geniculate nucleus and visual cortex.

– Peribrachial area• The region in the pons; contains acetylcholinergic neurons

involved in the initiation of REM sleep.

Page 39: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

IC = inferior colliculusPPT = pedunculopontine tegmental n.LDT = lateral dorsal tegmentum

Peribrachial area

Page 40: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Biological Rhythmsa. types of biological rhythmsb. neurohormones

Sleepa. functions of sleepb. measuring sleep

c. dreamingd. neural mechanismse. sleep disorders

Page 41: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Sleep Disorders– Insomnia

• Affect approximately 25% of the population• No single definition of insomnia• May be a symptom of physical ailment.

– Sleep apnea• Cessation of breathing while sleeping. • Can be mediated centrally or locally (obstructive). • May play a role in sudden infant death syndrome.

– Narcolepsy• Disorder characterized by periods of irresistible sleep, attacks

of cataplexy, sleep paralysis, and hypnagogic hallucinations.• Treat with stimulant medications.

Page 42: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

– Cataplexy• Paralysis during waking.

– Sleep paralysis• Paralysis just before a person falls asleep.

– Hypnagogic hallucination• Vivid dreams that occur just before a person falls asleep;

accompanied by sleep paralysis.

– Nocturnal enuresis• Bedwetting

– Somnambulism• Sleepwalking

– Pavor nocturnus• Night terrors

Page 43: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Insomnia vs. Sleep Deprivation• 27-year-old clinical psychologist on internship• Gets up at 6:30 AM• Works and mothers all day• Goes to bed about midnight• She gets about 6.5 hr sleep per night

Page 44: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Insomnia vs. Sleep Deprivation• 58-year-old woman, who is married and whose

husband has retired• Gets up at 8:30 AM• Goes to church, reads, plays bridge• Goes to bed about 10:00 PM

-sleeps until 1:30 AM

-is “up and down” rest of night

-finally gets out of bed around 8:30 AM

• She gets about 6.5 hr sleep per night

Page 45: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Insomnia vs. Sleep Deprivation• Insomnia assumes adequate opportunity to sleep.

• Sleep Deprivation

-adequate ability to sleep

-inadequate opportunity

-generally sleepy, at risk for accidents

• Insomnia

-inadequate ability to sleep

-adequate opportunity

-generally not sleepy, though may report fatigue

Page 46: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Definitions of Insomnia • Difficulty falling asleep• Difficulty maintaining sleep• Waking up too early• Nonrestorative or poor-quality sleep• May have daytime impact

Page 47: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Insomniaprimary cause - sleep medications

- develop tolerance; REM rebound- we are poor estimators of how much sleep we get.

treatments- Medications in short term- CBT in long term

• 8-10 wks to change poor habits and beliefs• sleep restriction, stimulus control, relaxation

techniques, and education.• unfortunately, takes time and few practitioners

Page 48: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

Medications• Use of hypnotics increased 60% from 2000 to

2006, at a cost of $45 billion per year.

Page 49: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e

FDA-Approved Medications• Benzodiazepines

– estazolam (Prosom)– flurazepam (Dalmane)– quazepam (Doral)– temazepam (Restoril)– triazolam (Halcion)

• Benzodiazepine Agonists – eszopiclone (Lunesta)– zaleplon (Sonata)– zolpidem (Ambien)

• Melatonin Agonists – ramelteon (Rozerem)

Page 50: Biological Rhythms a. types of biological rhythms b. neurohormones Sleep a. functions of sleep b. measuring sleep c. dreaming d. neural mechanisms e