endogenous pacemakers and exogenous zeitgebers Flashcards
Endogenous pacemakers
Internal body clocks that regulate many of our biological rhythms, such as the influence of the suprachiasmatic nucleus SCN on the sleep/wake cycle
Exogenous zeitgebers
External factors that affect or entrain our biological rhythms, such as the influence of light on the sleep/wake cycle
Sleep/wake cycle
A daily cycle of biological activity based on a 24-hour period (circadian rhythm) that is influenced by regular variations in the environment, such as the alternation of night and day
The suprachiasmatic nucleus
SCN receives information about light from optic chiasm
Animal studies and the SCN
Sleep/wake cycle disappeared when SCN destroyed (DeCoursey et al)
SCN transplanted from mutant hamsters with 20-hour sleep cycle (Ralph et al)
The pineal gland and melatonin
The SCN passes information to the pineal gland that controls melatonin
Light
Light shone on back of knees changed rhythm by up to three hours (Campbell and Murphy)
Social cues
Babies’ rhythms and jet lag are entrained by bedtimes and mealtimes
Beyond the master clock - endo
- May obscure other body clocks
- Other body clocks (peripheral oscillators) eg circadian rhythm of liver cells in mice altered but SCN unaffected (Damiola et al)
- Suggest other complex influences influences on the sleep/wake cycle
Interactionist system - endo
- Endogenous pacemakers cannot be studied in isolation
- Research looks at pacemakers/zeitgebers in isolation, approach lacks validity
- The more researcher attempt to isolate the influence of internal pacemakers, the lower the validity of the research
Ethics - endo
- Mammals used to study sleep/wake cycle, however causes many to die (e.g. Decourset et al’s chipmunks)
Environmental observations - exo
- Not same effect in all environments
- Ezs do not have same effect on people who live in darkness in summer and little light in winter (e.g. Inuit peoples in Arctic circle)
Case study evidence - exo
- Evidence challenges the role exogneous zeitgebers
- Man blind from birth with sleep/wake cycle, of 24.9 hours, could not adjust despite social cues, e.g. mealtimes (Miles et al)
Age-related insomnia - exo
- Poorer quality sleep when older
- Poorer quality sleep as people age, may be natural changes in biological rhythms (Duffy et al) or exogenous factors e.g. activity/exposure to natural light during day (Hood et al)