Chapter Five
Across
- 5. Training The systematic feeding back to an organism information about bodily function so that the organism can gain control of that function.
- 7. Strong, slow brain waves usually emitted during stage 3 and 4 sleep.
- 8. Set Theory: The view that response expectancies play a key role in the production of the experiences suggested by the hypnotist.
- 9. A drug from the resin of Cannabis sativa:often called ‘Hash.”
- 10. Another hallucinogenic drug whose name is an acronym for its chemical structure.
- 13. Slow brain waves sometimes accompanied by a hypnagogic state.
- 14. An addictive depressant used to relieve anxiety or pain and to treat epilepsy, high blood pressure and insomnia.
- 18. Distorted perceptions of hallucinations that occur days or weeks after LSD usage but mimic the LSD experience.
- 20. Temporary absence or cessation of breathing while asleep.
- 21. Synthesis Model The view that dreams reflect activation of cognitive activity by the reticular activating system and synthesis of this activity into a pattern.
- 23. A stage of sleep characterized by rapid eye movements, which have
- 25. A hallucinogenic drug.
- 27. A drug that lowers the rate of activity of the nervous system.
- 28. An instrument that measures muscle tension.
- 29. Theory A theory of hypnotic events as the splitting of consciousness.
- 30. A drug that increases activity of the nervous system.
- 32. Smoking Inhaling smoke from the tobacco products and exhalations of other people; also called secondhand smoking.
- 33. Chemical compounds consisting of hydrogen and carbon.
- 34. The dried vegetable matter of the Cannabis sativa plant.
- 37. In psychodynamic Theory, descriptive of material that is not in awareness but can be brought unto awareness by focusing one’s attention.
- 39. A hallucinogenic drug derived from the mescal (peyote) cactus.
- 40. An altered state of consciousness in which people appear to be highly suggestible and behave as though they are in a trance.
Down
- 1. Stimulants derived from, alpha-methyl-beta-phenyl-ethyl-amine.
- 2. Causing Hallucinations, delusions, or heightened perceptions.
- 3. Drugs used to relieve pain and induce sleep.The term is usually reserved for opiates.
- 4. Habituation to a drug, with the result that increasingly higher doses of the drug are needed to achieve similar effects.
- 6. Rapid low:amplitude brain Waves that have been linked to feelings of relaxation.
- 11. Giving rise to hallucinations.
- 12. Frightening dreamlike experiences that occur during the deepest stage of NREM sleep. Nightmares, in contrast, occur during REM sleep.
- 15. A characteristic cluster of symptoms that results from a sudden decrease in an addictive drugs level of usage.
- 16. A “sleep attack” in which a person falls asleep suddenly and irresistibly.
- 17. Substances Drugs that have psychological effects such as stimulation or distortion of perceptions.
- 19. The focus of one's consciousness on a particular stimulus.
- 22. State The drowsy interval between waking and sleeping characterized by brief, hallucinatory, dreamlike experiences.
- 24. The first four stages of sleep.
- 26. The deliberate, or conscious, placing of certain ideas, impulses, or images out of awareness.
- 31. In psychodynamic theory, descriptive of ideas and feelings that are not available to awareness.
- 35. Chemicals that act on opiate receptors but are not derived from the opium poppy.
- 36. A defense mechanism that protects the person from anxiety by ejecting anxiety-evoking ideas and impulses from awareness.
- 38. A group of narcotics derived from the opium poppy that provide a euphoric rush and depress the nervous system.