Biopsychology Flashcards

You may prefer our related Brainscape-certified flashcards:
1
Q

What does the central nervous system include?

A

The brain and the spinal cord

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2
Q

What does the peripheral nervous system divide into?

A

Autonomic (involuntary and vital bodily functions) and the somatic (receives sensory information from receptors)

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3
Q

What does the autonomic divide into?

A

Sympathetic (fight or flight response) and parasympathetic (rest and digest)

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4
Q

What is the function of the endocrine system?

A

Hormones are secreted into the blood steam from glands and are transported to target cells and organs.

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5
Q

What identifies a motor neuron?

A

1 long axon covered in myelin sheath and nodes of Ranvier. Found in the CNS and control muscle movements.

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6
Q

What identifies a sensory neuron?

A

Sensory neurons are found in receptors such as the eyes, ears, tongue and skin, and carry nerve impulses to the CNS. When these nerve impulses reach the brain, they are translated into sensations. Also have the cell body in the middle pf the axon.

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7
Q

What identifies a relay neuron?

A

Only found in the CNS, no myelin sheath, allow sensory and motor neurons to communicate.

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8
Q

Summarise localisation of function in 1 sentence:

A

Certain areas of the brain have specific functions e.g. Broca’s area is responsible for speech production

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9
Q

Areas of the brain:

A

Motor = in the frontal lobe and regulates voluntary movements
Auditory = in the temporal lobe and is responsible for speech comprehension and production
Visual = in the occipital lobe and is responsible for processing visual information
Somatosensory = in the parietal lobe and processes sensory information

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10
Q

How does Petersen support LoF?

A

Found that Wernicke’s area is active during listening tasks and Broca’s area is active during reading (subvocal repetition). Confirms that language is localised.

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11
Q

How does Phineas Gage support LoF?

A

Damaged his frontal lobe and experienced drastic behavioural changes, showing that mood regulation is localised to the frontal lobe.

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12
Q

How does Lashley’s rat study challenge LoF?

A

When up to 50% of the rat’s cortex was removed, they could still navigate the maze, showing that more complex processes such as learning many not be localised to one specific area. If rats (less complex) are relatively unaffected, surely more complex humans would not have learning localised.

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13
Q

Outline plasticity in 1 sentence:

A

The brain’s ability to adapt and recover in response to trauma.

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14
Q

How does Maguire’s study of taxi drivers support plasticity?

A

Found the longer they had been taxi driver’s the more grey matter there was and they had better spatial/navigational skills.
Shows that plasticity is possible during adulthood.

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15
Q

How does Draganski support plasticity?

A

Medical students’ brain scans showed neurological changes in the posterior hippocampus after learning. Supports plasticity as learning leads to neural regeneration.

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16
Q

Jodi Miller case study:

A

Had the whole left hemisphere removed, but within weeks of surgery was able to use homologous areas of the brain and functional recovery to regain function of nearly all of the right side functions (apart from her arms). Supports functional recovery.

17
Q

How does Hubel and Wiesel support plasticity?

A

sewed one eye of a cat shut and found that the relevant hemisphere of the occipital lobe was still active.

18
Q

What happens during functional recovery?

A

1) Transfers function from a damaged area to an undamaged area (neural reorganisation)
2) Neural regeneration creates new pathways + uses axonal sprouting to compensate for the damage

19
Q

One weakness of Sperry’s research:

A

Used a control group who had not had the corpus callosum severed or even had epilepsy, so it could be that people with an epileptic brain have a unique corpus callosum (no way to differentiate)

Only 11 Pps used.

Lacks ecological validity and mundane realism.

Also highly traumatic to be tested for the Pps.

20
Q

Kim Peek’s challenge to Sperry’s findings:

A

Born without a corpus callosum and could recall over 1200 books and read 2 pages at the same time using the 2 hemispheres seperately.