Biological rhythms - Circadian Rhythms Flashcards
what is a circadian rhythm
Circadian rhythms last about 24 hours and are set/reset by environmental light levels.
Three examples of circadian rhythms in the body:
Sleep/wake cycle
Temperature cycle
Hormone production
Our body clock is regulated by an internal system including such factors as….
release of hormones like melatonin (from the pineal gland), metabolic rate and body temperature.
what is an endogenous pacemaker
Internal body ‘clocks’ that regulate biological rhythms.
what are Exogenous zeitgebers
Environmental cues, such as light, that help to regulate the biological clock in an organism.
what is the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)
the master circadian pacemaker, found in the hypothalamus.
what is the primary input to the SCN
Light provides the primary input to this system, setting the body clock to the correct time each day in a process called photoentrainment.
Entrainment: an adjustment of the body clock in line with the environment
The internal circadian ‘clock’ is described as ‘free running
‘Free-running’ means that the sleep-wake cycle will maintain a cycle of about 24-25 hours, even in the absence of external cues.
Factors that could significantly impact the sleep/wake cycle include
jet travel and shift work, as they cause the biological clock e.g. the SCN (and the physiological systems that are dependent on this e.g. the sleep/wake cycle) to become completely out of sync with the outside world.
Case Study: Michel Siffre (1975)
procedure
Siffre (a French cave explorer) spent 6 months in a cave with no natural light or cues as to the day or time e.g. clocks or radio.
He simply woke, ate and slept when he felt it was appropriate to do so and his internal body clock was allowed to free-run.
Case Study: Michel Siffre (1975)
findings
Key findings: It settled into a sleep/wake cycle of 25-30 hours.
He lost track of how many days he had been in the cave, believing it to be one month less than he had actually stayed in.
Case Study: Michel Siffre (1975)
conclusions
Conclusions: This suggests that circadian rhythms persist despite isolation from natural light, which demonstrates the existence of an endogenous clock i.e. his SCN continued to regulate his sleep/wake cycle.
However, it also shows that external cues are important in terms of keeping the sleep/wake cycle in sync with the outside world, because his clock was not exactly 24 hours.
Evaluation of Michel Siffre’s (1975) research
:( The study of Michel Siffre is a case study and therefore has unique features. His body’s behaviour may not be typical of all people (lacks population validity).
:( Living in a cave may have particular effects due to, for example, the fact that it was cold could have affected certain physiological processes.
:(Siffre was not isolated from artificial light. On waking Siffre switched on lights, which is likely to have artificially re-set his body clock.
:)Siffre’s study was also an experiment - he controlled key variables (exogenous zeitgebers) to observe the effects on his sleep-wake cycle, demonstrating causal relationships.
Aschoff and Wever (1967) procedure and findings
Participants were placed in an underground WWII bunker, in the absence of any environmental and social time cues.
They found that most participants displayed circadian rhythms between 24 and 25 hours in length, although some rhythms were as long as 29 hours.
This shows that the sleep/wake cycle operates in the absence of external cues and that the natural free-running cycle is about 24-25 hours.
Folkard et al. (1985)
Procedure
Conducted an experiment to see if external cues could be used to override the internal clock.
A group of 12 people (18-21 yrs) lived in a temporal isolation unit for three weeks, isolated from natural light and other time cues, except a clock.
These volunteers agreed to go to bed when the clock indicated 11.45pm and to get up when it indicated 7.45am.
Initially, for the first 4 days, the clock ran normally, but gradually they quickened the clock until it was indicating the passing of 24 hours when actually only 22 hours had passed.
At the beginning the volunteers’ circadian cycle matched the clock but as it quickened their rhythm ceased to match the clock and continued to follow a 24-hour cycle rather than the 22-hour cycle imposed by the experiment (except for one participant who did adapt to the 22-hour cycle).
Overall, this suggests that the circadian rhythm can only be guided to a limited extent by external cues.