9. Endogenous Pacemakers and Exogenous Zeitgebers

    Cards (21)

    • What are endogenous pacemakers?
      Internal bodily regulators of biological rhythms
    • How do endogenous pacemakers affect biological rhythms?
      They entrain biological rhythms to conform to certain cyclical periods
    • What is an example of a cyclical period for circadian rhythms?
      One cycle every 24 hours
    • What role does the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) play in biological rhythms?
      It processes information about daylight and day length
    • How does the SCN receive information about light?
      Through the eyes, processed by the visual area in the occipital lobe
    • What happens to melatonin release during nighttime?
      Increased melatonin release triggers decreased serotonin production
    • What effect does light exposure have on melatonin release during the daytime?
      It triggers the pineal gland to release less melatonin
    • What was the main finding of DeCoursey et al (2000) regarding SCN lesions in chipmunks?
      The majority of the experimental group had been killed within 80 days
    • What did Ralph et al's research on SCN cells from hamsters demonstrate?
      The restored rhythms exhibited the period of the donor genotype
    • What are exogenous zeitgebers?
      External environmental changes affecting biological rhythms
    • How do social cues function as exogenous zeitgebers?
      They signify when to wake up and when to fall asleep
    • How can one avoid jet lag according to the study material?
      By accustoming oneself to the sleeping and eating times of the destination
    • What was demonstrated by Siffre et al (1967) regarding light and the sleep-wake cycle?
      Light can entrain biological rhythms even when not detected by the eyes
    • What did Campbell and Murphy's research show about light exposure?
      It produced deviations of 3 hours in participants' sleep-wake cycles
    • What did Damiola et al's findings suggest about the SCN's influence?
      The SCN's influence may be overestimated due to peripheral oscillators
    • What are peripheral oscillators?
      Collections of cells that act independently of the SCN
    • What ethical issues arise from animal research in biopsychology?
      Deliberate harm to animals breaches ethical guidelines
    • What is a cost-benefit analysis in the context of animal research?
      Assessing whether ethical costs outweigh the benefits of findings
    • What limitation is associated with generalizing findings from animal studies to humans?
      Differences in physiology and circadian rhythms limit ecological validity
    • What case did Miles et al (1977) report regarding circadian rhythms?
      A man with a sleep-wake cycle of 24.9 hours that could not be changed
    • What does the case reported by Miles et al (1977) suggest about exogenous and endogenous factors?
      Their influence may be overestimated