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last updated:

March 3, 2024

[Brain Image]    

PSY 340 Brain and Behavior

Class 20: Rhythms of Waking and Sleeping (Outline)

   

Chronobiology = how time and seasons affect the biological functioning of living organisms

[Seasons]

Consider what the rhythms of your life are like in this time of your life.
  • What time do you usually go to bed?
  • What is sleep like for you? Do you toss & turn? Awaken at night? Dream?
  • What time do you usually get up?
  • How do you feel when you get up?
  • What time of day are you usually the most awake & alert?
  • What time of day are you usually the least alert & able to concentrate?
  • What season of the year do you like the most? Why?

[Clocks]

A. Endogenous Cycles

Circadian rhythm of human body temperature What cycles do you experience? 

  • Each year = circannual (circum = "about" + annus = "year)
  • Each month = circamensual (circum = "about" + mensis = "month")
  • Each day = circadian (circum = "about" + dies = "day")

Are there any other ways in which you are affected by the change of seasons or time of the year?

  • If changes happen because of mechanisms in the body = endogenous ("born from within")
  • If changes happen because of mechanisms outside the body = exogenous ("born from outside") 


B. Setting & Resetting the "Biological Clock"

Human
                    circadian rhythms

Various Circadian Rhythms in humans

[Jet Lag diagram]Zeitgeber ("time giver" or "synchronizer") is an environmental stimulus which resets biological clock. The process of resetting the biological clock is called entrainment

  • Light is the primary zeitgeber in humans
    • Internal body temperature tends to set rhythms for different organs in the body
  • Also (less important) noise, exercise, and ambient/environmental temperature
  • New data suggest that food might also serve as a zeitgeber, esp. in the liver.

Jet Lag = disruption of circadian rhythms due to travel across time zones
  • Most people find it easier to travel from east to west across time zones rather than west to east.

Shift Work

  • Associated with higher level of accidents

Jet lag & shift work as possible factors in metabolic disorders (such as obesity, Type II diabetes)

Thais et al.

Social Jetlag
  • "Social Jetlag" = the difference between when we MUST get up (for school or work) and when our body wants to get up
  • On days when we do not HAVE to go to work or school, many individuals actually get more sleep.
Sleep & Social Jetlag

The Human Circadian Rhythm: Two "chronotypes"
(most of us fall in between)
  • "morning people" or "larks"
  • "evening people" or "owls"
 
C. Mechanisms of the Biological Clock

[Diagram of Light-Brain-Sleep mechanism]1. Superchiasmatic Nucleus (SCN)


2. Circadian Rhythm Biochemistry

Nobel Prize foe 2017 in Physiology or Medicine

Per-Tim
              & CLOCK rhythms in humans
  • per [= period]) and tim [= timeless] proteins interact with a third protein (CLOCK) to cause sleepiness.
  • In the morning, low levels of per & tim build up over the course of the day.
  • Bright light tends to stop or, even, break down tim production
  • A human PER genetic mutation: circadian rhythm less than 24 hours.

Melatonin3. Melatonin







The first version of this page was posted on March 2, 2005.