circadian rhythms Flashcards

1
Q

What are biological rhythms?

A

Patterns of change in body activity

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2
Q

What are biological rhythms governed by?

A

Endogenous pacemakers - internal biological clocks

Exogenous zeitgebers - external changes in environment

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3
Q

What are circadian rhythms?

A

Last for around 24 hours

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4
Q

What are two examples of circadian rhythms?

A

Sleep/wake cycle

Core body temperature

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5
Q

What is the sleep/wake cycle?

A

Drowsy at night - effect of daylight (EZ) on our cycle

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6
Q

Describe Siffre’s cave study

A

What would happen if we left our sleep/wake cycle without daylight (free-running)?
Stayed underground for 2 months without natural light - was September but thought it was August
Free running biological clock settles to around 25 hours

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7
Q

Describe Aschoff and Wever’s study

A

Participants stayed 4 weeks in bunker without natural light
All but one had circadian rhythm of 24-25 hours
Natural sleep/wake cycle is 25 hours but is entrained by EZs

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8
Q

Describe Folkard’s research

A

Participants lived in cave for 3 weeks
Slept at 11:45 and woke at 7:45
Researchers sped up clock so days were only 22 hours
Only one participant could adjust
Suggests natural rhythm can’t be easily overridden by external changes

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9
Q

Evaluation - practical application to shift work

A

Night workers experience a period of reduced concentration at 6am - circadian trough
Accidents more likely
Shift workers more likely to develop heart disease
Economic implications - how best to manage worker productivity

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10
Q

Evaluation - practical application to drug treatments

A

Circadian rhythms coordinate basic processes eg heart rate
Effect on pharmakinetics - action of drugs on body
Research shows there’s peak times when drugs are most effective

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11
Q

Evaluation - case studies and small samples

A

Aschoff and Wever - small sample
Siffre - case study
Do not represent wider population
At age 60 Siffre realised his body clock was slower as a young man

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12
Q

Evaluation - poor control in studies

A

Had access to natural light
Turned on lamp when he woke up
Czeisler - able to increase rhythm from 22 to 28 hours using dim lighting

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13
Q

Evaluation - individual differences

A

Individual sleep/wake cycles can vary - 13 to 65 hours

Duffy - larks and hours (natural preference for when they sleep)

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