Brain and learning (8.8–8.15) Flashcards
What is the function of the cerebrum?
Involved in vision, learning, thinking, emotions and movement.
Back is involved in vision and the front is involved in thinking.
What is the location of the cerebrum?
The outside top layer of your brain.
What is the function of the hypothalamus?
Maintains body temperature and produces hormones that control the pituitary gland.
Where is the hypothalamus found?
Just beneath the middle part of the brain.
What is the function of the medulla oblongata?
Controls breathing rate and heart rate.
What is the location of the medulla oblongata?
Base of the brain at the top of the spinal cord.
What is the function of the cerebellum?
Coordinating movement and balance
Where is the cerebellum?
Underneath the cerebrum (srivelled thing)
How do CT scanners work?
They use radiation to produce cross sectional images of the brain. Dense structures absorb more radiation so show up lighter on the screen.
How might a CT scan be used to investigate brain structure and function?
Shows the diseased or damaged brain structure and if patient has lost some function the function of that part of the brain can be worked out.
How can CT scans be used in medical diagnosis?
Show damaged or diseased areas of the brain eg the location and extent of a brain bleed. Can then work out which blood vessels have been damaged.
How do MRI scans work?
Use strong magnetic field and radio waves to produce cross sectional images of the brain.
How can MRI scanners be used in investigating brain structure and function?
Allow see difference between normal and abnormal brain structures in better resolution. However can only be worked out by looking at damaged areas.
How can MRI help with medical diagnosis?
Show damaged mass eg tumour. Tumour cells show up differently as they respond differently to magnetic field.
Show the exact size and location.
What is an fMRI?
Show changes in brain activity as they happen. More oxygenated blood flows to areas as it happens and oxygenated blood responds differently to deoxygenated blood.
How can an fMRI be used to investigate brain structure and function?
Asking to carry out a task then seeing which part of the brain becomes active.
How can fMRI be used in medical diagnosis?
Shows diseased or damaged areas and allow study abnormal activity. eg brain before during a seizure allowing to pinpoint exactly what part of the brain isn’t working properly.
How does a PET scan work?
Radioactive tracer is injected eg radioactively labelled glucose.
How are PET scans used to investigate brain structure and function?
Very detailed and can be used to investigate both the structure and function in real time.
How can PET scans help with medical diagnosis?
Show areas that are unusually inactive or active eg Alzheimer’s metabolism in certain areas is reduced.
What is habituation?
Animals increase survival by responding to a stimulus.
If the stimulus is unimportant and repeated over a long time the animal learns to ignore it.
Habituation means animals don’t waste energy on unimportant stimuli.
How does habituation result in fewer electrical impulses being sent to the effectors
- Repeated exposure to a stimulus decreases the amount of calcium ions that enter the presynaptic neurone.
- This decrease in the Ca+ means that less neurotransmitter is released from vesicles into the synaptic cleft, so fewer bind to the receptors in the post synaptic membrane.
- Fewer sodium ion channels on the postsynaptic membrane open so there is a reduced chance of the threshold for an action potential being reached.
- So fewer signals are sent to the effector.
Where is the visual cortex?
Back of the cerebral cortex.
What are neurones in the visual cortex grouped into?
Ocular dominance columns.