Midterm- kaya mo yan HAHAHA

A visually engaging illustration showing various sleep disorders and drug categories, including representations of dream imagery and common drug symbols, in a colorful and educational style.

Sleep and Drug Awareness Quiz

Test your knowledge on sleep disorders and drug categories with our engaging quiz! Explore various topics, from the types of sleep disorders to major drug classifications, and discover how well you understand these important areas.

  • Multiple choice questions
  • Covering disorders, dreams, and substances
  • Learn while you play!
91 Questions23 MinutesCreated by DreamingMind87
Types of sleep disorder:Disorder in which the person experiences extreme fear and screams or runs around during sleep without waking fully.
Night Terrors
Sleepwalking
Nightmares
REM Behavior Disorder
The inability to get sleep, stay asleep or get a good quality of sleep
Hard to breathe
Sleep deprived
Insomnia
Night terrors
Disorder in which a person stops breathing for nearly half a minute or more. Generalized by loud, non-rhythmic snoring, followed by silence and gasping for air.
Insomnia
Sleep Apnea
Narcolepsy
Restless Leg Syndrome
Sleep disorder in which a person falls immediately into REM sleep during the day without warning.
Narcolepsy
Sleep Apnea
Restless Leg Syndrome
Insomnia
All of these are theories of why do we dream, except?
Freuds theory of wish fulfillment
Information Process Theory
Physiological Function theory
Activation Synthesis Theory
Cognitive Development Theory
Restorative Theory of Sleep
None of the above
All of the above
The actual content of the dream
Manifest Content:
Latent Content:
Actual content
Cognitive content
The hidden meaning of the dream
Manifest Content:
Latent Content:
Actual content
Cognitive content
Revised version of the Activation Synthesis Explanation of dreams in which information that is accessed during waking hours can have an influence on synthesis of dreams
Activation Synthesis
Activation-Information-Mode Model
Information Process Theory
Cognitive Development
Gender differences in dreams : More romantic dreams: usually with someone they know.
Male
Female
Gender differences in dreams: More sexual dreams: usually with unknown and attractive partners
Male
Female
Gender differences in dreams: Common dream themes: outdoor, unfamiliar setting, involve weapons, tools, cars and roads
Male
Female
Gender differences in dreams: Common dream themes: People they know, personal appearance concerns, family and home
Male
Female
Major drug categories : Drugs that increase the functioning of the nervous system
Depressants:
Stimulants:
Narcotics:
Hallucinogens:
Major drug categories : Drugs that decrease the functioning of the nervous system
Stimulants
Depressants
Narcotics
Hallucinogens
Major drug categories :Drugs that alter perception and may cause hallucinations
Narcotics
Depressants
Stimulants
Hallucinogens
Major drug categories: Painkilling depressant drugs derived from the opium poppy
Hallucinogens
Stimulants
Depressants
Narcotics
Stimulants: Stimulants that are synthesized (made) in laboratories rather than being found in nature
Cocaine
Amphetamines
Hallucinogens
Stimulants
Stimulants: A natural drug found in coca plant leaves.
Marijuana
Cocaine
Nicotine
Crack
A relatively mild but toxic stimulant (The active ingredient in tobacco)
Marijuana
Nicotine
Cocaine
Tubules
A mild stimulant found in coffee, tea, and other plant based substances
Marijuana
Nicotine
Caffeine
Cocaine
Depressant drugs that have a sedative effect
Barbiturates or Major Tranquilizers
Benzodiazepines or Minor Tranquilizers
Habitues or Major Tranquilizers
Seracafe or Minor Tranquilizers
The chemical resulting from fermentation or distillation of various kinds of vegetable matter
Marijuana
Nicotine
Caffeine
Alcohol
Narcotic derived from opium, used to treat severe pain
Morphine
Heroin
Narcotics
Hallucinogens
Narcotic drug derived from opium that is extremely addictive
Marijuana
Nicotine
Cocaine
Heroin
Continuation of a visual sensation after removal of the stimulus
Afterimage
Binaural cue
Binocular cu
Cochlea
Thin strip of tissue within the cochlea that contains the hair cells which serve as the sensory receptors for the auditory system
Cochlear implant
Cornea
Fovea
Basilar membrane
Two-eared cue to localize sound
Binocular cue
Binaural cue
Binocular disparity
Cochlear implant
System in which perceptions are built from sensory input
Cochlear implant
Congenital
Bottom-up processing
Depth perception
Segmenting our visual world into figure and ground
Cone
Figure-ground relationship
Fovea
Perception
Ability to perceive depth
Depth
Cochlear
Depth perception
Good continuation
Specialized photoreceptor that works well in low light conditions
Rad
Vestibular sense
Rod
Kinesthesia
Perception of the body’s movement through space
Interaural
Kinesthesia
Aerobic
Thermoception
Sensory signal indicating potential harm and maybe pain
Neuropathic
Neuron
Nociception
perception
Different portions of the basilar membrane are sensitive to sounds of different frequencies
Perceptual hypothesis
Photoreceptor theory
Place theory of pitch perception
Trichromatic theory of color perception
Color vision is mediated by the activity across the three groups of cones
Tympanic theory
Photoreceptor theory
Place theory of pitch perception
Trichromatic theory of color perception
Contributes to our ability to maintain balance and body posture
Tympanic sense
Vestibular sense
Balance spectrum
Liquid immuno sense
Taste for monosodium glutamate
Salty
Sweet
Sour
Umami
Genetic disorder that results in the inability to experience pain
Congenital painless
Congenital insensitivity to pain
Analgesia congenital
Congenital numbness
Drinking a large amount (more than 4-5 drinks) within a limited period of time
Binge Drinking
Alcoholism
Korsakoff’s Syndrome:
Addiction
Addiction to the consumption of alcoholic liquor or the mental illness and compulsive behavior resulting from alcohol dependency
Korsakoff’s Syndrome:
Binge Drinking
Alcoholic disorder
Alcoholism
A form of dementia brought about by a severe vitamin B1 deficiency (when you drink instead of eating)
Korsakoff’s Syndrome
Binge Drinking
Alcoholism
Alcoholic disorder
The inability of the voluntary muscles to move during REM sleep
REM Rebound
REM Paralysis
REM conjugate
REM nightmares
Increased amounts of REM sleep after being deprived of REM sleep on earlier nights.
REM Rebound
REM Paralysis
REM conjugate
REM nightmares
Electronic device that consists of a microphone, a speech processor, and an electrode array to directly stimulate the auditory nerve to transmit information to the brain
Cochlear implant
Microchip
Coclaer implant
Microchip implant
Not perceiving stimuli that remain relatively constant over prolonged periods of time
Sensory adaptation
Signal detection
Pitch perception
Rmoception
Small, fast waves that indicate alertness and mental activity
Beta Waves
Alpha Waves
Theta Waves
Delta Waves
Larger, Slower brain waves that indicate relaxation or light sleep
Theta Waves
Delta Waves:
Beta Waves
Alpha Waves
Very large, very slow waves that indicate the early stages of sleep
Alpha Waves:
Theta Waves:
Beta Waves
Delta Waves:
Long, Slow Brain waves that indicate the deepest stages of sleep
Theta Waves
Delta Waves
Alpha Waves
Beta Waves
Grouping of taste receptor cells with hair-like extensions that protrude into the central pore of the taste bud
Taste receptor
Tongue
Taste bud
Taste receptor cells
Perceive depth in an image when two parallel lines seem to converge
Horizontal perspective
Linear perspective
Absolute perspective
Straight perspective
One-eared cue to localize sound
Monocular cue
Monoceptic cue
Monaural cue
Monaral cue
Slightly different view of the world that each eye receives
Binocular cue
Binocular disparity
Binaural cue
Binaural cue
Fluid-filled, snail-shaped structure that contains the sensory receptor cells of the auditory system
Binaural cue
Cochlear implant
Conductive hearing
Cochlea
Deafness from birth
Congenital deafness
Congenital insensitivity to hear
Deafness
Infant deafness
Logarithmic unit of sound intensity
Hertz (Hz)
Decibel (dB)
Newton meter (nm)
All the electromagnetic radiation that occurs in our environment
Visible spectrum
Wavelength
Electromagnetic spectrum
Frequency
Field of psychology based on the idea that the whole is different from the sum of its parts
Gestalt psychology
Cognitive psychology
Leibniz psychology
Freud psychology
Auditory receptor cell of the inner ear
Hair cell
Lobe
Helix
Cochlea
Cycles per second; measure of frequency
Decibel (dB)
Newton meter (nm)
Hertz (Hz)
Failure to notice something that is completely visible because of a lack of attention
Interaural level difference
Inattentional blindness
Blind spot
Cataract
Signal that some type of tissue damage has occurred
Interaural level difference
Inflammatory pain
Incus
Receptors
Sound coming from one side of the body is more intense at the closest ear because of the attenuation of the sound wave as it passes through the head
Interaural level difference
Interaural timing difference
Just noticeable difference
Inflammatory pain
Small difference in the time at which a given sound wave arrives at each ear
Interaural level difference
Just noticeable difference
Interaural timing difference
Inflammatory pain
Difference in stimuli required to detect a difference between the stimuli
Interaural timing difference
Interaural level difference
Just noticeable difference
Inflammatory pain
Results in a degeneration of inner ear structures that can lead to hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo, and an increase in pressure within the inner ear
Ménière's disease
Meissner’s corpuscle
Merkel’s disk
Neuropathic pain
Bulb-like structure at the tip of the frontal lobe, where the olfactory nerves begin
Olfactory receptor
Optic bulb
Olfactory bulb
Nerve bulb
Sensory cell for the olfactory system
Olfactory sense
Optic sense
Olfactory receptor
Neuropathic sense
Color is coded in opponent pairs: black-white, yellow-blue, and red-green
Wavelength
Color spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum
Opponent-process theory of color perception
Carries visual information from the retina to the brain
Optic chiasm
Optic nerve
Optic bulb
Optic reception
Way that sensory information is interpreted and consciously experienced
Point of view
Sensation
Perception
Experience
Educated guess used to interpret sensory information
Pattern perception
Perceptual hypothesis
Pacinian corpuscle
Photoreceptor
Light-detecting cell
Pinna
Photoreceptor
Pacinian
Pattern
Perception of body position
Photoreceptor
Proprioception
Perception
Perceptual
Touch receptor that detects stretch
Sensation
Sensory adaptation
Ruffini corpuscle
Sensorineural
What happens when sensory information is detected by a sensory receptor
Sense
Sensation
Sensory adaptation
Sensorineural h
Change in stimulus detection as a function of current mental state
Sensory adaptation
Sensorineural
Signal detection theory
Sensation
Things that are alike tend to be grouped together
Similarity
Team
Homogenous
Set
Sound’s frequency is coded by the activity level of a sensory neuron
Pitch
Wavelength
Temporal pitch
Temporal theory of pitch perception
Temperature perception
Thermodynamic
Thermobud
Thermoception
Thermosation
Interpretation of sensations is influenced by available knowledge, experiences, and thoughts
Trichromatic theory of color perception
Top-down processing
Transduction
Tympanic
Eardrum
Termporal bone
External canal
Tympanic membrane
Inner ear
Spinning sensation
Dizziness
Vertigo
Vestibular sense
Sensorineural
Portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see
Visible spectrum
Wavelength
Electromagnetic spectrum
Spectrum
a cycle of bodily rhythm that occurs over a 24 hour period
Krebs cycle
Circadian rhythms
Homeostasis
Sensorineural rhythms
The tendency to maintain a balance. Or optimal level, within a biological system
Sensorineural
Dizziness
Sleep regulation
Homeostasis
Refers to the brain’s control of switching between sleep and wakefulness as well as coordinating this cycle with the outside world.
Sensorineural
Dizziness
Sleep regulation
Homeostasis
A hormone released by the hypothalamus that helps regulate the human sleep cycle
Adrenaline
Serotonin
Melatonin
Oxytocin
Inside the hypothalamus, sensitive to changes in light
Sleep regulation
Superchiasmatic Nucleus
Body Temperature
Thalamus
Brief sidesteps into sleep lasting only a few seconds
Sleep Deprivation
Micro sleeps
Sleep regulation
Transduction
Stages of sleep: Very light sleep, sense of falling common, non rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep
Stage 2
Stage 3&4
Stage 1
Stage 5
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