Ch 6 Flashcards

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1
Q

Arousal…

A

Arousal is a heightened sense of awareness. Moderate arousal has been shown to be best for performance efficiency and affect.

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2
Q

We see increases in ___ and ___ with arousal

A

dopamine and norepinephrine

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3
Q

Boredom is associated with…

A

underarousal, motivation for change, seeking impulsivity

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4
Q

Other dimensions of arousal (6 points)

A

blood sugar, nutritional status, cortical NTs (GABA), rest and fatigue, circadian rhythm, health status

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5
Q

Define stress

A

Stress is a psychophysiological consequence of an event that challenges an organism’s ability to cope. Stressors can be any stimuli that disrupt homeostasis. This requires adaptation or adjustment.

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6
Q

General Adaptation Syndrome

A
  1. Acute stress response (emergency reaction)- SNS activation, adrenal and central catecholamine release. Rebound- PNS activation, slow SNS deactivation, central aCH release.
  2. Chronic stress (resistance)- long-term HPA axis activation, enhanced acute stress response, enhanced central monoamine activity.
  3. Exhaustion- idiosyncratic, involves psychopathology.
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7
Q

Examples of acute stressors

A

novelty, loss in status, cognitive challenge, less reward than expected.

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8
Q

Acute Stress Physiology

A

HPA axis activation (CRF -> ACTH -> adrenal cortex -> cortisol)

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9
Q

What effects does cortisol have on the body?

A

Cortisol liberates stored energy and converts fatty acids and amino acids into glucose. It facilitates adrenaline release from adrenal glands. It temporarily suppresses growth hormone and immunity, and stimulates appetite.

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10
Q

Cortisol (stress) and appetite

A

In females, associated with social stress.

In males, associated with achievement-failure.

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11
Q

Emotional eaters and ghrelin

A

Ghrelin increases when stressed and returns to baseline quickly in non-emotional eaters, but stays elevated in emotional eaters.

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12
Q

Some points about chronic stress and stressors

A

Prolonged HPA activation. Chronic stressors include severe loss of control, social subordination, extreme coping failure. CRF can have direct anxiogenic effects; ACTH acts in the brain to increase catecholamine activity.

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13
Q

Corticosteroids in the brain…

A

Bind selectively in the limbic system (HT, amygdala, hippocampus, septum). Moderate levels can inhibit MAO which breaks down serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine, promoting positive affect. Chronically high levels correlated with depression.

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14
Q

Some impacts of chronic stress on the body

A

suppresses immunity and growth hormone, increases blood pressure, causes hippocampal damage, associated with weight gain and shorter life span.

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15
Q

Epel et al study and caregiving

A

Telomere length decreases as chronicity of caregiving increases. Telomere length decreases as perceived stress scale increases.

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16
Q

Unique impact of stress on women…

A

Stress can be harmful for reproduction and nurturance which are costly biological processes. It can inhibit ovulation, cycling and disrupt pregnancy.

17
Q

Exhaustion is caused by excessive ____ activity

A

adrenocortical; idiosyncratic weaknesses emerge, can lead to heart failure, stroke, ulcers, depression etc.

18
Q

Long term and short term effects of PTSD

A

Short term: shock, terror, sleeplessness, sensory disturbances.
Long term: paranoia, delusions, depression

19
Q

Glucocorticoids and stress are…

A

not one in the same!! They have primary functions in energy mobilization, including carb metabolism. They are also used in many therapeutic settings.