psyc550 biological bases of behavior sleep and sex

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PSYC550Biological Bases of

BehaviorSleep and Sex

A Physiological and Behavioral

Description of Sleep• alpha activity

– Smooth electrical activity of 8-12 Hz recorded from the brain; generally associated with a state of relaxation.

• beta activity– Irregular electrical activity of 13-30 Hz recorded from

the brain; generally associated with a state of arousal.• theta activity

– EEG activity of 3.5-7.5 Hz that occurs intermittently during early stages of slow-wave sleep and REM sleep.

• delta activity– Regular synchronous electrical activity of less than 4

Hz recorded from the brain; occurs during the deepest stages of slow-wave sleep.

SWS vs REM• NREM (SWS in stages 3 and 4)

– Alpha, delta, and theta activity– Light, even respiration– Lowered BP– Muscle control is present– Difficult to arouse (especially from stage 4)

• REM– Asynchronized beta– Increased respiration and BP– REM– PGO waves– Spinal paralysis– Dreams– Sexual arousal

A Physiological and Behavioral

Description of Sleep• REM sleep

– A period of desynchronized EEG activity during sleep, at which time dreaming, rapid eye movements, and muscular paralysis occur; also called paradoxical sleep.

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

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

activity during its deeper stages.• basic rest-activity cycle

– A 90-minute cycle (in humans) of waxing and waning alertness, controlled by a biological clock in the caudal brain stem; controls cycles in REM sleep and slow-wave sleep.

Neurotransmitters involved in Sleep

• Serotonin– In raphe and pons– Increased in SWS, decreased in REM

• Dopamine– Decreased in REM

• Norepinephrine– Decreased in REM

• Acetylcholine– Greatly increased in REM

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Disorders of Sleep• insomnia

– Discuss sleep hygiene

• drug dependency insomnia– An insomnia caused by the side effects of ever-increasing

doses of sleeping medications.• sleep apnea

– Cessation of breathing while sleeping.• narcolepsy

– A sleep disorder characterized by periods of irresistible sleep, attacks of cataplexy, sleep paralysis, and hypnagogic hallucinations.

• sleep attack– A symptom of narcolepsy; an irresistible urge to sleep

during the day, after which the person awakens feeling refreshed.

People with narcolepsy collapse into sleep from total alertness without

warning.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOAvWbspeSQ&feature=related

Narcolepsy• cataplexy

– A symptom of narcolepsy; complete paralysis that occurs during waking.

• sleep paralysis– A symptom of narcolepsy; paralysis occurring just

before a person falls asleep.• hypnagogic hallucination

– A symptom of narcolepsy; vivid dreams that occur just before a person falls asleep; accompanied by sleep paralysis.

• hypocretin– A peptide, also known as orexin, produced by

neurons whose cell bodies are located in the hypothalamus; their destruction causes narcolepsy.

Disorders of Sleep

• REM sleep behavior disorder– A neurological disorder in which the

person does not become paralyzed during REM sleep and thus acts out dreams.

• Night terrors vs nightmares• Somnambulism• Somniloquy• Enuresis• Bruxism

Why do we sleep?

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25% 25%25%25%1. For restoration2. To consolidate

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Why Do We Sleep?• sleep-related eating disorder

– A disorder in which the person leaves his or her bed and seeks out and eats food while sleepwalking, usually without a memory for the episode the next day.

• fatal familial insomnia– A fatal inherited disorder characterized by

progressive insomnia.• rebound phenomenon

– The increased frequency or intensity of a phenomenon after it has been temporarily suppressed; for example, the increase in REM sleep seen after a period of REM sleep deprivation.

• adaptive response to danger

Physiological Mechanisms of Sleep

and Waking• locus coeruleus

– A dark-colored group of noradrenergic cell bodies located in the pons near the rostral end of the floor of the fourth ventricle; involved in arousal and vigilance.

• raphe nucleus– A group of nuclei located in the reticular formation of the

medulla, pons, and midbrain, situated along the midline, contains serotonergic neurons.

• tuberomammillary nucleus (TMN)– A nucleus in the ventral posterior hypothalamus, just rostral

to the mammillary bodies; contains histaminergic neurons involved in cortical activation and behavioral arousal.

• ventrolateral proptic area (VLPA)– A group of GABAergic neurons in the preoptic area whose

activity suppresses alertness and behavioral arousal and promotes sleep.

Physiological Mechanisms of Sleep

and Waking• PGO wave

– Bursts of phasic electrical activity in the pons, followed by activity in the lateral geniculate nucleus and visual cortex, a characteristic of REM sleep.

• medial pontine reticular formation (MPRF)– A region that contains neurons involved in

the initiation of REM sleep; activated by acetylcholinergic neurons of the peribrachial area.

Physiological Mechanisms of

Sleep and Waking• magnocellular nucleus

– A nucleus in the medulla; involved in the muscular paralysis that accompanies REM sleep.

Biological Clocks• circadian rhythm

– A daily rhythmical change in behavior or physiological process.

• zeitgebers– A stimulus (usually the light of dawn) that resets the

biological clock that is responsible for circadian rhythms.• suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)

– A nucleus situated atop the optic chiasm. It contains a biological clock that is responsible for organizing many of the body’s circadian rhythms.

• melanopsin– A photopigment present in ganglion cells in the retina

whose axons transmit information to the SCN, the thalamus, and the olivary pretectal nucleus.

Biological Clocks

• pineal gland– A gland attached to the dorsal tectum;

produces melatonin and plats a role in circadian and seasonal rhythms.

• melatonin– A hormone secreted during the night by

the pineal body; plays a role in circadian and seasonal rhythms.

Sexual Development

• sry– The gene on the Y chromosome that instructs the

undifferentiated fetal gonads to become testes.• organizational effect (of hormone)

– The permanent effect of a hormone on tissue differentiation and development.

• activational effect (of hormone)– The effect of a hormone that occurs in the fully

developed organism; may depend on the organism’s prior exposure to the organizational effects of hormones.

Sexual Development

• defeminizing effect– An effect of a hormone present early in development that

reduces or prevents the later development of anatomical or behavioral characteristics typical of females.

• androgen– A male sex steroid hormone; stimulates the development of

the Wolffian system. Testosterone is the principal mammalian androgen.

• masculinizing effect– An effect of a hormone present early in development that

promotes the later development of anatomical or behavioral characteristics of males.

• testosterone– The principal androgen found in males.

AIS• androgen insensitivity

syndrome– A condition caused by

a congenital lack of functioning androgen receptors; in a person with XY sex chromosomes, causes the development of a female with testes but no internal sex organs.

Sexual Development

• Turner’s syndrome– The presence of only one sex chromosome

(an X chromosome); characterized by lack of ovaries but otherwise normal female sex organs and genitalia.

Sexual Development

• follicule-stimulating hormone (FSH)– The hormone of the anterior pituitary gland that causes

development of an ovarian follicle and the maturation of an ovum.

• luteinizing hormone (LH)– A hormone of the anterior pituitary gland that causes

ovulation and development of the ovarian into a corpus luteum.

• estradiol– The principal estrogen of many mammals, including

humans.• estrogen

– A class of sex hormones that cause maturation of the female genitalia, growth of breast tissue, and development of other physical features characteristic of females.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007

Hormonal Control of Sexual Behavior

• oxytocin: The big “O”– A hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary gland;

causes contraction of the smooth muscle of the milk ducts, the uterus, and the male ejaculatory system; also serves as a neurotransmitter in the brain.

• prolactin– A hormone of the anterior pituitary gland, necessary

for production of milk; has an inhibitory effect on male sexual behavior.

• lordosis– A spinal reflex seen in many four-legged animals;

arching of the back in response to approach of a male or to touching the flanks, which elevates the hindquarters.

Hormonal Control of Sexual Behavior

• pheromone– A chemical released by one animal that affects the behavior

or physiology of another animal; usually smelled or tasted.• Lee-Boot effect

– The slowing and eventual cessation of estrous cycles in groups of female animals that are housed together; caused by a pheromone in the animals’ urine; first observed in mice.

• Whitten effect– The synchronization of the menstrual or estrous cycles of a

group of females, which occurs in the presence of a pheromone in a male’s urine.

Hormonal Control of Sexual Behavior

• Vandenbergh effect– The early onset of puberty seen in female animals that are

housed with males; caused by a pheromone in the male’s urine; first observed in mice.

• Bruce effect– Termination of pregnancy caused by the odor of a

pheromone in the urine of a male other than the one that impregnated the female; first identified in mice.

• vomeronasal organ (VNO)– A sensory organ that detects the presence of certain

chemicals, especially when a liquid is actively sniffed; mediates the effects of some pheromones.

• accessory olfactory bulb– A neural structure located in the main olfactory bulb that

receives information from the vomeronasal organ.

Hormonal Control of Sexual Behavior

• medial nucleus of the amygdala– A nucleus that receives olfactory

information from the olfactory bulb and accessory olfactory bulb; involved in the effects of odors and pheromones on reproductive behavior.

• congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)– A condition characterized by hypersecretion

of androgens by the adrenal cortex; in females, causes masculinization of the external genitalia.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007

Neural Control of Sexual Behavior

• medial preoptic area (MPA)– An area of cell bodies just rostral to the

hypothalamus; plays an essential role in male sexual behavior.

• sexually dimorphic nucleus– A nucleus in the preoptic area that is much larger

in males than in females; first observed in rats; plays a role in male sexual behavior.

• periaqueductal gray matter (PAG)– The region of the midbrain that surrounds the

cerebral aqueduct; plays an essential role in various species-typical behaviors, including female sexual behaviors.

Neural Control of Sexual Behavior

• ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (MH)– A large nucleus of the hypothalamus

located near the wall of the third ventricle; plays an essential role in female sexual behaviors.

The neural structure most involved in female reproductive behavior

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2. The Medial Preoptic Area (MPA)

3. The Ventromedial Hypothalamus (VMH)

4. The Hippocampus (HPC)

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During paradoxical sleep, you will expect an increase in the

neurotransmitter:

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