Announcements. From Last Time. I. Consciousness -- Overview. States of Consciousness 2/19/2014. Note-taker needed for DRC

Similar documents
What Effect Do Schemas Have On The Recall Of

Agenda: Memory. Announcements Recovered memories. Fabricated memories. Logic Evidence. 3bPOT16-1

Increasing the amount of information that can be held in short-term memory by grouping related items together into a single unit, or chunk.

CHAPTER 6: Memory model Practice questions at - text book pages 112 to 113

MEMORY. Announcements. Practice Question 2. Practice Question 1 10/3/2012. Next Quiz available Oct 11

Mechanisms of Memory: Can we distinguish true from false memories?

Memory. 7.2 How Are Memories Maintained over Time? Sensory memory is brief Working Memory Is Active Long-Term Memory Is Relatively Permanent

October 2, Memory II. 8 The Human Amnesic Syndrome. 9 Recent/Remote Distinction. 11 Frontal/Executive Contributions to Memory

Lesson 5 Sensation, Perception, Memory, and The Conscious Mind

Why is dispersion of memory important*

Consciousness. Psychoactive drugs. Hypnosis

How Many Colors Can You Remember? Capacity is about Conscious vs unconscious memories

Memory 2/15/2017. The Three Systems Model of Memory. Process by which one encodes, stores, and retrieves information

Chapter 3. Perception and Memory. Factors That Affect Teacher s Guidance

Feeling. Thinking. My Result: My Result: My Result: My Result:

Transcript of Cerebrum Podcast Watering Memory Trees

Fundamentals of Cognitive Psychology, 3e by Ronald T. Kellogg Chapter 2. Multiple Choice

Human Behavior Topic Outline Course Description and Philosophy

CAREGIVER SUMMIT. The PD You Can't See: Dealing with Non-Motor Symptoms. Kaitlyn Roland, PhD. Sponsored by:

SENSATION AND PERCEPTION KEY TERMS

MODULE 32 MEMORY STORAGE AND RETRIEVAL

THE FORMATION OF FALSE MEMORIES LOFTUS AND PECKRILL (1995)

Other Disorders Myers for AP Module 69

(SAT). d) inhibiting automatized responses.

Sensation is the conscious experience associated with an environmental stimulus. It is the acquisition of raw information by the body s sense organs

FORENSIC HYPNOSIS WITH THE DEAF AND HEARING IMPAIRED

A Healthy Brain. An Injured Brain

Biology Change Pressure Identity and Self-Image

GRADE LEVEL AND SUBJECT: ADVANCED PLACEMENT PSYCHOLOGY (11 TH AND 12 TH )

E-LOGOS ELECTRONIC JOURNAL FOR PHILOSOPHY/2002 ISSN

Prentice Hall. Psychology North Carolina Advanced Placement for Psychology

Patient education : The Effects of Epilepsy on Memory Function

Dissociative Disorders

Announcements. DRC forms please turn them in Research paper. turn in research question in lecture on 4/19 (next Tues) final paper due Th 5/19

CAN T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG?

Psych 120. General Psychology 7/12/2010. In the last lecture we learned about

Dissociation Explanation

Do all these faces look familiar? Can you name them all? Why is it difficult to recall names even though you can recognize them? More generally, why

Epilepsy and Neuropsychology

Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition. Schiffman & Kanuk

Dissociative Identity Disorder

MEMORY STORAGE. There are three major kinds of storage:

Elizabeth Loftus. Lost in the mall study 1992

THE OBSERVER REMAINS HIDDEN. Sakari Kallio' and Antti Revonsuo''^ University ofskovde, Sweden', University of Turku, Finland^

Dealing with Distress When Dementia is in the House

CHAPTER 2: PERCEPTION, SELF, AND COMMUNICATION

AP Psychology Syllabus

Treatment of Psychological Disorders

Checklist for Executive Function Skills Elementary Level

Lecture 17: The Cognitive Approach

Dissociative Disorders. Dissociative Amnesia Dissociative Identity Disorder Depersonalization-Derealization Disorder

MEMORY MODELS. CHAPTER 5: Memory models Practice questions - text book pages TOPIC 23

AP Psychology Syllabus

The Standard Theory of Conscious Perception

Human Abilities 2. How do people think? Universal Design

PSYCHOLOGY. Part/Unit Topics Marks. A Theory What is Psychology 7. 2 Methods of Enquiry in Psychology The bases of Human Behaviour 8

The Learning Process. Learning is a Process. Behavioral Learning Theories. Chapter 3 Learning and Memory. How many of these do you remind?

Monday 3/26/2012 Warm-up: What is superstition? How do we acquire them? Activities: 1. What is the best or most effective form of punishment for

SAT1A GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Unit : I - V

Somatoform Disorders. Somatoform Disorders. Hypochondriasis. Preoccupation with health, physical appearance and functioning

Internal Requirements for Change Agents

What is memory? Memory is the function in the brain that links our past, present, and future. What is identity? Identity is a sense of who we are.

Discovering the Secret of Incentives That Work!

Dissociative Identity Disorder: An In-Depth Look

Announcements. Grade Query Tool Updated with. Exam Scores Aplia Scores Cumulative scores and comparison to class

Consciousness Gleitman et al. (2011), Chapter 6, Part 1

Announcements. Returning to Memory. V. Stage of processing. V. Stage of Processing Model. What do you recall? 4/9/2014

Introduction to Categorization Theory

Importance of Deficits

Simple Pure Whole TM Wellness

24. PSYCHOLOGY (Code No. 037)

Thriving, Surviving, Living with D.I.D (Dissociative Identity Disorder)

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS

Coon/Mitterer Introduction to Psychology: Gateways to Mind and Behavior, 12e

Chapter 6. Consciousness

Alzheimer s disease 10 warning signs

Prof. Greg Francis 7/31/15

Child and parent perspective of effective and ineffective therapeutic alliance during treatment for stuttering

Biomedical Therapies p. 471 Current Trends and Issues in Treatment p. 475 Institutional Treatment in Transition p. 480 Putting it in Perspective p.

Myers PSYCHOLOGY. (6th Ed) Chapter 5. Sensation

Exam #4 Study Guide. Chapter 7 Memory

Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function BRIEF. Interpretive Report. Developed by SAMPLE

Two ways of assessing recall*

AP Psychology. Course Audit

BHS Memory and Amnesia. Functional Disorders of Memory

The Cold Control theory of Hypnosis. Zoltán Dienes

Picking Co*on Ac,vity. Picking Cotton on 60 Minutes ( shtml)

Representational Content and Phenomenal Character

Discovering Statistics: Experimental Project

/ The Unbidden Past: Involuntary Autobiographical Memories as a Basic Mode of. Remembering.

How To Optimize Your Training For i3 Mindware v.4 And Why 2G N-Back Brain Training Works

Memory: Storage and Retrieval. Lecture 19

Outline 3/14/2013. Practice question What are the two types of learning we discussed? Example: remembering our ATM PIN. PSYC 120 General Psychology

24. PSYCHOLOGY (Code No. 037)

Goal: To recognize and differentiate different forms of psychopathology that involve disturbances in consciousness and memory and our awareness of

Defining principles of Strategic family therapy

Recognizing and Managing the Emotional Aspects of Parkinson s. Pamela R. Palmentera, LCSW Coordinator & Clinical Social Worker

PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology

Optical Illusions 4/5. Optical Illusions 2/5. Optical Illusions 5/5 Optical Illusions 1/5. Reading. Reading. Fang Chen Spring 2004

Introduction to the Study of Psychology PSYC1001 Final Exam Practice Quiz

Transcription:

Announcements Note-taker needed for DRC From Last Time I. Consciousness -- Overview States of Consciousness A. What is consciousness (csns.) 1.Csns is the selective attention (e.g. Cocktail Party ) Aldous Huxley The Doors of Perception I find myself agreeing with the eminent Cambridge philosopher, Dr. C. D. Broad " The suggestion is that the function of the brain and nervous system and sense organs is in the main eliminative and not productive. The function of the brain and nervous system is to protect us from being overwhelmed and confused by this mass of largely useless and irrelevant knowledge, by shutting out most of what we should otherwise perceive or remember at any moment, and leaving only that very small and special selection which is likely to be practically useful." According to such a theory, each one of us is potentially Mind at Large. But in so far as we are animals, our business is at all costs to survive. To make biological survival possible, Mind at Large has to be funneled through the reducing valve of the brain and nervous system. What comes out at the other end is a measly trickle of the kind of consciousness which will help us survive on this planet. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=vjg698u2mvo Most people, most of the time, know only what comes through the reducing valve and is consecrated as genuinely real by the local language. Certain persons, however, seem to be born with a kind of by-pass that circumvents the reducing valve. In others temporary by-passes may be acquired either spontaneously, or as the result of deliberate "spiritual exercises," or through hypnosis, or by means of drugs. Through these permanent or temporary by-passes there flows, not indeed the perception "of everything that is happening everywhere in the universe" but something more than, and above all something different from, the carefully selected utilitarian material which our narrowed, individual minds regard as a complete, or at least sufficient, picture of reality. 1

I. Consciousness -- Overview A. What is consciousness (csns.) 1.Csns is the selective attention 2.Csns involves voluntary control 3.Self-awareness B. Consciousness without awareness? B. Findings from split-brain research 1. Is consciousness inherently tied to language 2. Does each hemisphere have it's own type of csns LAUGH * CLAP Gazzanaga KISS * JUMP B. Findings from split-brain research 1. Is consciousness inherently tied to language 2. Does each hemisphere have it's own type of csns 3. Do we have two csns's? 2

Is this really consciousness? 7 * Follow one-word commands Simple games Are you trying to make two people out of me? Distinct Hemisphere Preferences in Split-Brain Patient Colors Clothing Faces B. Findings from split-brain research 1. Is consciousness inherently tied to language 2. Does each hemisphere have it's own type of csns 3. Do we have two csns's? 4. Lecturer's conclusion Consciousness III. Altered States of csns A. We all experience variations in our states of consciousness B. The difficulty in deciding what is / is not an altered state of consciousness Internal Reality #1 Internal Reality #2 Internal Reality #3 3

III. Altered States of csns C. What gives us a unified sense of consciousness over time? 1. Identity 2. Memory 3. Relatively uninterrupted stream of consciousness III. Altered States of csns D. Dissociative Identity Disorder (formerly Multiple Personality Disorder) = a profound disturbance in the normally integrative functions of identity, memory, or consciousness. Increasing Prevalence of DID My Spiel Primarily a North American phenomenon Perspectives on the Genesis of DID Post-traumatic Model (e.g. Gleaves, 1996) Socio-cognitive Model (Spanos, 1994, 1996) DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria Disruption of identity characterized by two or more distinct personality states Recurrent gaps in the recall of everyday events, important personal information, and/or traumatic events that are inconsistent with ordinary forgetting Drug/medical rule outs Know this Know this 4

Sample Studies of Inter-identity Amnesia Sometimes find amnesia between identities Always find transfer of memory between identities Interpretations Transfer represents implicit memory Parsimonious Alternative: Motivated behavior From Allen & Iacono, PPPL, 2001 The DID Study Procedure Identity A Hears List A (24 words) Shallow encoding via syllable judgment Switch to Identity B Identity B Hears List B (24 words) Exclusion Test in Visual Modality Make judgment was it on list B? Three classes of stimuli A Words (24) B Words (24) Distractors (24) Kong, Allen, Glisky, 2008 Was it on List B? If amnesic, this is a simple recognition task For someone with memory for List A, this is an exclusion task that requires source memory DIFFICULT! Participants Seven patients meeting DSM-IV criteria for DID Assessed with SCID-D 6 females and one male All had some college education, two with graduate degrees All had history of other disorders (by self report) Number of identities: 4-16 Four or Five matched controls for each patient Asked to simulate DID performance Kong, Allen, Glisky, 2008 5

Results Individual Patients (with controls) Individual Patients (with controls) The Nature of Amnesia in DID Fabrication? Not obviously so Social Construction (Spanos, 1994, 1996) Constructivist account of memory may also explain amnesia in DID (Allen & Iacono, 2001) Cognitive mechanisms in Socially- Constructed DID: A Humble Proposal Memory is constructive and reconstructive Any mnemonic experience involves Encoding Storage Retrieval Evaluation All of the above are guided by schemas and agendas (Johnson, 1997) Cognitive mechanisms in Socially- Constructed DID: A Humble Proposal A mental representation is identified as a memory to the extent that it involves: A sufficient number of features The proper configuration of features All evaluated in terms of our understanding This account has been used in explaining false memories May also explain how inter-identity amnesia may develop over time 6

Synopsis of Spiel End of Spiel 1. Two perspectives: Post-traumatic versus socio-cognitive 2. DID diagnosis requires amnesia 3. Folks who report amnesia during an interview are not guaranteed to show objective evidence of amnesia in the laboratory, as evidenced by my study and several others 4. Claims of amnesia in DID are best treated with some skeptical thinking. IV. State & mood dependent memory A. Memory better for events/information if tested in same state or mood as during learning B. Memory better for events/information consistent with current mood or state Cue #1 Cue #1 Cue #3 Encoding Storage Retrieval Cue #2 Cue #2 Cue #4 7