Infradian and Ultradian rhythms

Cards (11)

  • Infradian rhythms - rhythms that have a duration of over 24 hours (e.g. menstrual cycle)
  • Ultradian rhythms - cycles that last less than 24 hours (e.g. stages of sleep)
  • Infradian rhythm
    1. weekly rhythms
    2. monthly rhythms
    3. annual rhythms
  • Weekly rhythms
    • male testosterone levels peak at the weekends
    • lower frequency of births at weekends
  • Monthly rhythms
    Menstrual cycle 23-36 days
    • governed by monthly changes in hormone levels
    Research study - McClintock
    • menstrual cycle is an endogenous system that is affected by EZs (such as other women's pheromones)
  • Annual rhythms
    • birds who migrate to warmer climates/more food
    • seasonal affective disorder (SAD)
  • Ultradian rhythm - sleep stages
    • stages 1-4 that are involved in a cycle of around 90 minutes
    • some research states that it continues throughout the day (with cycles of hunger/fatigue/concentration)
  • Sleep pattern research
    • taking people into a different environment from one they're used when sleeping can create confounding variables that effect the results
    this questions that validity and reliability of research
  • Russell et al
    • samples of sweat from a donor were taken and rubbed onto the upper lip of women
    • the groups were kept separate but their menstrual cycles synched
    supports research into menstrual cycles and the EZs affects on some infradian rhythms
  • Methodological limitations in synchronisation studies
    • there are many factors that affect a woman's cycle (e.g. stress/diet) which could act as confounding variables in synchronisation studies
    this questions the validity of the results and their applicability to this area of psychology
  • Animal studies
    • much of the knowledge of the effects of pheromones comes from animal studies which are well documented
    • evidence from human behaviour is speculative and inconclusive
    we can't certainly explain the effect of pheromones on humans based solely off of the questionable generalisability of animal studies