Biological Rhythms
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- Created by: Betsy_2018
- Created on: 29-07-17 10:45
Introduction
- patterns of changes in the body, conforming to cyclical time periods
- influenced by endogenous pacemakers (internal body clocks)
- influenced by exogenous zeitgebers (environmental stimuli)
- ultradian rhythm: less than a day (multiple times)
- circadian rhythm: roughly a day (24hrs)
- infradian rhythm: greater than a day
- circannual: roughly a year
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Circadian Rhythms
- roughly 24 hours
- Sleep/Wake Cycle and Core Body Temperature
- CBT is lowest at 4am (36˚C) and highest at 6pm (38˚C) and affects cognitive performance
Sleep/Wake Cycle
- feel drowsy during the night when it is dark, and alert when it is day and bright
- daylight is an exogenous zeitgeber
- Siffre: spent 2 months in an underground cave with no natural light until September (but believed it to be mid-August) - shows the influence of light on biological rhythm (settled just longer than 24hrs)
- Aschoff and Wever: put participants in a WW2 bunker for 4 weeks with no natural light; circadian rhythm settled to 25 hours (apart from one) - suggests that SWC may be slightly longer than 24hrs, but is entrained by light (exogenous zeitgebers)
- Folkard: put 12 people in a dark cave for 3 weeks and subtly fast-forwarded the clock so that each day was only 22 hours long; each participant except one struggled to adapt, suggesting the SWC is an innate circadian rhythm that can not be overridden
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Circadian Rhythms Evaluation
For
- Knutsson: found that shift workers were 3x more likely to develop heart disease (importance of circadian rhythms on body)
- Boirin: found that shift workers were the most tired and made the most mistakes at 6am due to a lack of concentration at this time (circadian trough)
- practical application to drug therapy (pharmacokinetics) - when drugs are taken at certain times of day, they are most effective (especially cancer and epilespsy medication - Baraldo)
Against
- Duffy: individual differences between 'morning' and 'night' people
- research suggests that people have natural SWCs between 13 and 65 hours (not so strict)
- Czeisler: found that they could shift participants' SWC between 22-28hrs with dim artifical light - questioning the internal validity of 'no-natural-light' studies
- studies have small sample sizes or are singular case studies - are not generalisable
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Ultradian Rhythms
- occurs multiple times a day
- the sleep cycle (stage of sleep)
Stages of Sleep
- 5 stages of sleep over 90 minutes, on a cycle
- can be monitored using EEGs
- Stage 1 + 2: sleep escalator; light sleep; easily woken; slow, rhythmic alpha-to-theta waves
- Stage 3 + 4: delta waves; great amplitude; deep sleep; slow wave sleep; not easily woken
- Stage 5: REM sleep (Rapid Eye Movement); paralysed body; fast brain activity; eye activity highly correlated to events in the dream
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Ultradian Rhythms Evaluation
For
- Dement and Kleitman: found that REM activity was highly correlated with experience in their research of 9 sleeping adults - used EEGs (with caffeine and alcohol variables controlled)
- research has been done with EEGs - high scientific credibility
- lots of replications of Dement and Kleitman's research has found the same thing (high external validity)
- research has control over caffeine and alcohol
Against
- small sample sizes of evidence
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Infradian Rhythms: Seasonal Affective Disorder
- SAD
- persistent low mood (depression)
- disinterest in acitivity and life
- shorter daylight hours
- circannual and circadian aspects (seasonal and sleep-wake cycle)
- melatonin secreted at night to help us sleep
- more melatonin secreted over longer nights
- melatonin affects serotonin production (more melatonin = less serotonin)
Evaluation [For]
- phototherapy application (a lightbox that projects artifical light to reset melatonin levels)
- Eastman: found that phototherapy gave an improvement of SAD in 60% of patients
Evaluation [Against]
- Eastman: also found a 30% placebo effect
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Infradian Rhythms: The Menstrual Cycle
- governed by hormonal changes which regulate ovulation
- first day: womb lining is shed (with typical cycle 28 days - 22-35)
- oestrogen stimulates egg production and its release
- progesterone triggers womb lining to grow, and prepares womb and body for lining to shed
- if preganancy does not occur, the egg is absorbed by the body and menstruation occurs
- Stern and McClintock: took pheromones from armpits of 9 regular women (different cycle stages) (frozen and treated); given to 20 women with irregular periods (upper lips); (68%) cycles synched up to 9 women (their odour donors)
Evaluation [For and Against]
- evolutionary theory support - women fall pregnant at the same time to raise children together
- Schank: evolutionary theory is not correct (would cause greater competition)
- many variables affect periods (not just hormones) - confounding variables for case studies
- small samples of women in research
- Trevathan: found very little evidence for synchronisation (low external support)
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Endogenous Pacemakers
Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN)
- collection of nerve cells in the hypothalamus (in each hemisphere)
- master oscillator in mammals for the Sleep/Wake Cycle
- lies just above the optic chiasm (from which it receives information about light)
- allows biological clock to adjust to changing light patterns
- Pineal Gland recieves information from SCN, releasing melatonin over night
- DeCoursey: destroyed SCN in 30 chipmunks and found that most died when released into the wild, as their SWC was disrupted and they were active during vulnerable night hours
- Ralph: mutant hamsters with a SWC of 20 hours had their Suprachiasmatic Nucleus cells injected into normal hamsters' brains; found the normal hamsters' SWCs shifted to 20 hours = biological body clocks are a big influence
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Endogenous Pacemakers Evaluation
For
- animal studies are under controlled conditions
- animal studies can be replicated in large quantities (once it has passed ethical issues)
Against
- animal studies are unethical as there is no consent
- animal studies are ungeneralisable to humans as humans are much more complex
- evidence is from small sample sizes or case studies
- Campbell and Murphy: there are other peripheral oscillators (not just the SCN), as they found a SWC shift after shining light on knee skin cells
- Damiola: the liver is also a peripheral oscillator (saying SCN is the only one is reductionist)
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Exogenous Zeitgebers
- external, environmental factors that reset biological clocks (entrainment)
Light
- affects SWC and other functions (blood circulation and hormonal secretion)
- Campbell and Murphy: light detected in skin receptors of knees in 15 participants and their SWCs shifted by up to 2 hours
Social Cues
- circadian rhythms start at 6 weeks old
- circadian rhythms are entrained by 16 weeks
- schedules imposed by adults are children's key influences
- local times of eating and drinking train circadian rhythms and help to beat jet lag in adults
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Exogenous Zeitgebers Evaluation
For
- Burgess: found that jet lagged people (travelled East to West) recovered better when exposed to continuous bright light - suggests that light has a strong influence over melatonin secretion and therefore circadian rhythms
Against
- Miles: SWC of a blind man was not shifted from 24.9 hours by social cues
- those who live in the Artic have normal cycles despite the sun not setting during Summer
- evidence is from small-scale studies and exceptional case studies
- exogenous zeitgebers and endogenous pacemakers usually interact, and so separating them to study individually is hard and unrealistic
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