Michael Frank 3/14/07 sleep, consciousness, and paper writing
Today Consciousness and sleep Quiz Brief review of paper writing
Sleep review How many sleep stages? How are they measured?
Sleep stages Stage 1: Hypnogogic sleep Stage 2: Sleep spindles Stages 3 & 4: Slow-wave sleep REM sleep
Sleep stages Kales and Kales. N. Engl. J. Med.1974;209:
Controlling sleep arousal
Discussion: Consciousness & Sleep Are we conscious during dreams (REM sleep)? What is the function of REM sleep? Why might sleep patterns change with age?
Quiz What are the two types of conditioning (bonus: what is the name of the researcher most associated with each technique) What is latent learning? If TV and video games make children violent, this is an example of what kind of learning? What was the hardest question on the exam?
Grades histogram
Writing a critical review Seems strange, but actually very common in science: –Read a variety of sources –Synthesize into an argument for or against Paper should be about particular arguments, not opinions or personalities –No reference to own feelings –Very rare to use direct quotations –Not about personalities involved, just about theories/facts
Paper structure Thesis: Squirrels are evil. [argumentative claim] 1.Squirrels steal from other species 1.bird feeders [evidence] 2.picnics [evidence] 2.Squirrels do not act morally towards one another 3.Squirrels bite without provocation Conclusion: Squirrels are definitely evil [restate thesis]. Should we eradicate them? [extend]
The Road Map Road map gives the reader a preview of the argument: Signposts help the reader stay on track “What is the moral status of squirrels? They steal from their own kind, they act immorally towards other species, and they bite without provocation. The evidence is clear: squirrels are evil.” “Our second argument for squirrels’ immorality is...”
Mechanics Thesis in the first paragraph No summary! –You can cite evidence for a specific point, but that’s different: [Starting a paragraph] Not so good: In his essay, Ronaldo writes that his hatred of squirrels started at an early age, when he saw one steal a sandwich from his brother. Better: Squirrels steal from both their own species and from humans. Ronaldo observes that squirrel-on-human crime is extremely prevalent in Northern California.
Possible traps Point-counterpoint –bad: john says this, but steve says the other thing –better: structure your argument around particular claims, not by evaluating the authors’ statements Too much emphasis on “flow” –Arguments can be separate points –Numbering is useful for organization