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Introduction to Course Web Site: psy.cmu /~ kotovsky /85102/home102 .php

Introduction to Course Web Site: http:// www.psy.cmu.edu /~ kotovsky /85102/home102 .php. Instructor TA ’ s Course Secretary Major Instructional Strategy and Goals Depth, higher educ., focus, purpose(s) Major Activities: highly varied Methodology. Questions.

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Introduction to Course Web Site: psy.cmu /~ kotovsky /85102/home102 .php

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  1. Introduction to CourseWeb Site: http://www.psy.cmu.edu/~kotovsky/85102/home102.php • Instructor • TA’s • Course Secretary • Major Instructional Strategy and Goals • Depth, higher educ., focus, purpose(s) • Major Activities: highly varied • Methodology

  2. Questions • For the first recitation, bring a significant or “big” and real question about psychology, one that psychology might (or perhaps might not) have an answer to, and be prepared to discuss it a bit and also turn it in to your TA. It should be something that you are genuinely interested in and curious about. Save a copy for yourself—it might come in handy when generating a paper topic!

  3. Question Examples(Including one author’s attempt to answer) David Brook’s Ex. (NYT 8/24/10)- What are our thinking weaknesses? “For example, Charlie Munger of Berkshire Hathaway once described “The Psychology of Human Misjudgment.” He and others list our natural weaknesses: -We have confirmation bias; we pick out evidence that supports our views. -We are cognitive misers; we try to think as little as possible. -We are herd thinkers and conform our perceptions to fit in with the group. To use a fancy word, there’s a metacognition deficit. Very few in public life habitually step back and think about the weakness in their own thinking and what they should do to compensate. A few people I interview do this regularly (in fact, Larry Summers is one). Of the problems that afflict the country, this is the underlying one.” Brooks also more recently wrote about what makes true genius: the ability to hold two contradictory ideas in your head simultaneously; a kind of self examining or self-challenging stance we might think of as a thinking strength.

  4. Methodology: Some Basic Issues • Why Psychology? (vs. other sources of wisdom) • Observation vs. experimentation • Independent and dependent variables • Experimental control-getting rid of spurious variables • Correlation and causation • “Unusualness” of a result: statistics • Focus on actual data • Distributions (the statistical nature of our data)

  5. Sleeping The ignored behavior!

  6. Defining/describing sleep • Decreased awareness & interaction with world • Decreased motility & muscular activity • Characteristic posture • Partial or total decrement in voluntary consciously directed behavior • Decreased forebrain activity & cortical input from lower centers

  7. Sleep as a behavior • Quietude • Life span decrease • Brain activity/EEG & reactivity

  8. Theories of sleeping • Motivation • Energy conservation • Restorative • Memory consolidation • Adaptive

  9. Brain Control Hypothalamus: Rostral/Caudal sleep areas • Rostral (stimulate --> sleep, extirpate --> wake) • Caudal (stimulate --> wake, extirpate --> sleep) • Reticular activating system & monitoring • Melatonin (pineal & hypothal.) and diurnal cycle • Suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus and entrainment to diurnal rhythm “zeitgrabers” • Dement in a cave!

  10. Arguments for Necessity/Functionality of sleep! • Regularity • Motivation/crummy feelings • Health involvement • -Fatal Familial Insomnia (30+ families/thalamic/death) • -Some linkage to other disorders (depression) • Hallucination argument • REM recovery • Restorative: increase in SWS in sleep-deprived and athletes, increase anabolic/decrease catabolic activity • Memory consolidation REM block->poor memory function

  11. Arguments Against Necessity • Deprivation/human & animal • Exceptional sleepers • Hallucination explanation • Dement study 11 days deprv. Then 16/8 • REM recovery: limited • Programmatic reduction-->1-2 hr. decline • 5.5/60, 1/2 hr per 2 weeks->4.5-5.5 ok and year later slept 1 to 2.5 less! • Cats in a puddle!

  12. Conclusions • Adaptive theory seems to win! • The function of sleep is sleep! • Ungulates sleep much less than meat eaters • Five hours or less (opossums 19-20 hours) • Accounts for life span decrease as well • But still a bit of an open question

  13. Dreaming: What & Why? Multiple perspectives and much speculation!

  14. Outline • Dream behavior • Theories of Dreaming • Conclusions • What can we learn from our dreams? • Are they meaningful? True / predictive?

  15. Dream behavior & description • Within sleep • Amount • Brainwave activity & bodily quietude:the paradox • REM

  16. Dreams & REM sleep • Aserinsky-REM • Dement & Kleitman-Stages • REM amount & periodicity • Brainstem cholinergic & adrenergic promoting & inhibiting areas for REM

  17. Some Questions: • Are Dreams meaningful--what do they mean? • Are the predictive or “true”? • How do they differ from other states? • What is their function do they even have one? • Are they brain functions or mind functions?

  18. Outline • Characteristics and Descriptions • Theories of Dreaming • Conclusions • What can we learn from our dreams? • Are they meaningful? True / predictive?

  19. Theories of Dreaming • Dreams as meaningful events: • Freud (& Jung) • Aserinsky, Dement & Kleitman implications • Hall/Cartright • Dreams as random activity (Hobson +) • Synthesis (perhaps)

  20. Psychoanalytic Theory • Mental conflict • Unconscious motivations • Two forces: impulses & defenses • Dreams as a release • Dreamwork and its results • Latent dream • Manifest dream • Remembered dream Dreamwork and forgetting as protective mechanisms Poetzel Effect

  21. Freud & Neuroimaging • Michael Anderson- Validates Repression: Forebrain active in inhibiting hippocampus on repressed items • Allen Braun: Limbic system-emotion active during REM • Prefrontal cortex (working mem. Attention, logic & self- monitoring) inactive during REM • Above consistent with dream bizarreness & emotional disinhibition/wish fulfillment • Visual cortex inactive but higher visual areas active so we see w.o. visual input- one of the amazing things about dreaming!

  22. Freud & Neuroimaging (Mark Solms) Injured Pons vs. injured Forebrain -Pons-disrupts REM but dreaming goes on. -Forebrain-lose dreaming but REM goes on. -Also, some dreaming outside of REM Role of Motivation (in addition to emotional areas) -Prefrontal leukotomy (white matter in ventro-medial forebrain area) decreases dopamine release. It’s a motivational area “seeking” behavior. -Hartmann: administering dopamine supercharges dreaming! Supportive of Freudian tie between motiv. & dreaming.

  23. Variations on Psychoanalytic Explanation + Challenges • Aserinsky, Dement & Kleitman: REM & implications • Hall and Cartwright: Dream Series • Challenging Views • Dreams as random activity (Hobson +) • Synthesis (perhaps) as Hobson accepted imaging results

  24. Other Neuroscience Views • Crick: Purge extraneous connections • Evans: Sorting function on day’s events • Winson: Sorting for survival • Wilson: Rat Dream article- maze learning during dreams • Hobson: random activity & activation-synthesis hypothesis

  25. Hobson: Dream Transformations From: inanimate animate character To: inanimate 21 0 0 Animate 2 0 7 Character 0 0 14

  26. Dream Characteristics Lack of active volition Absence of ongoing reflective judgment Limited to phenomena of the immediate present Diffuse cognitive slippage--dreamlike confusion- transformations of perception, thought, memory, emotion, relationships, etc. Gaps in experience: 20% Confusion of thought & irrational intuitions: 41% Problems in sustained attention: 5% Memory deficiencies within the dream: 15% Overall, even 51% of "clearest dreams" had clouding of cs. --Usually not radical (scz, psychedelic) but rather more like that of waking life Can even have hallucinations or psychedelic exper. in dreams (as in waking life!) ex. flying 4%, bizarre figures,4%, changed identity 3%, LSD-like transformations of vision 13%. Mostly visual 47%. Somatic 10%, audit. 14%.

  27. Conclusions • Can we obtain meaningful insights about ourselves through our dreams? • What can we learn from our dreams? • Are they meaningful? true / predictive/useful? • Dream problem-solving (Lowie, Kekule)!

  28. Basic Methodology • Experimentation • Independent vs. Dependent variables • Observational vs. Experimental studies • Causation vs. Correlation • Experimental “control”

  29. Making Observations • Scientific observations often begin with a question or hypothesis. • The hypothesis must be testable. • This calls for an operational definition of key terms to specify the study’s dependent variable. • Data must also be systematically collected. • Researchers ignore anecdotal evidence.

  30. Defining the Sample • Based on observations of a sample, psychologists want to draw conclusions about a broad population. • Random sampling • All members of the population have an equal chance of being picked to participate. • Researchers also use other procedures, including stratified sampling and case studies.

  31. The Power of Experiments • The two groups must be matched at the outset of the experiment. • To ensure matching groups, researchers use: • random assignment (ex. Clinical trials) • within-subject comparison. • taking precautions to address problems created by the sequence of conditions

  32. The Control Condition

  33. Assessing External Validity • Researchers want their study to mirror circumstances of the broader world. • external validity • External validity depends on many factors. • The study should not change behaviors the researchers hope to understand.

  34. Assessing External Validity • One concern here involves the study’s possible demand characteristics: • cues that can signal to participants how they’re supposed to behave • One way of avoiding this problem is to use a double-blind design.

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