Content (3.1) Flashcards

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1
Q

what is the nervous system?

A

a network of specialised cells which can transmit information around the body, coordinating the behaviour of the organism

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2
Q

what is the CNS?

A

the brain and spinal cord

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3
Q

what is the role of the brain?

A

to process information coming from the senses and then control the behaviour resulting from this information

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4
Q

what is the role of the spinal cord?

A

it connects the brain to the rest of the body, allowing messages to be passed from the body to the brain and vice versa

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5
Q

what are the four lobes of the brain?

A

frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, temporal lobe

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6
Q

what are examples of evidence that indicate specific roles for brain structure/ localisation of function?

A

Phineas Gage, Broca

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7
Q

who is Phineas Gage?

A

a railway worker who received a serious brain injury when a metal bar was shot through his head in 1848. This damaged the right frontal lobe of his brain and his personality changed, becoming more irresponsible and aggressive. His doctor concluded that the damage to his brain changed his behaviour, and later researchers concluded that specific brain areas were responsible for specific psychological functions.

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8
Q

who is Broca?

A

French neuroscientist who treated stroke patients. He famously studied a patient known as ‘Tan’ who couldn’t speak, and a post-mortem revealed that the lower part of Tan’s left frontal lobe (known as Broca’s area) was damaged. Broca concluded that the ability to speak was linked to this region - we now know it is responsible for the motor control needed for speech production

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9
Q

what is Wernicke’s area

A

the area is the rear of the left temporal lobe and is involved with understanding speech

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10
Q

what is lateralisation?

A

the tendency of the different hemispheres of the brain to take care of slightly different functions

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11
Q

what is contralateralisation?

A

the left hemisphere corresponds to the right side of the body and vice versa

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12
Q

what is localisation?

A

the tendency of different areas within the brain to be responsible for different functions

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13
Q

what are the main functions of the brainstem?

A

survival functions eg. heartbeat, respiration and primary consciousness

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14
Q

what are the main functions of the cerebellum?

A

coordinating muscle movements and maintaining posture, balance and equilibrium

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15
Q

what the main functions of the cerebrum?

A

enables cognition, problem-solving, emotions, sensing the environment

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16
Q

what is the cerebral cortex?

A

the matter covering the cerebrum which has ridges (gyri) and grooves (sulci) so more can fit into brain

17
Q

what is the corpus callosum?

A

the centre of the cerebrum which is a nerve pathway allowing the two hemispheres to communicate with each other

18
Q

what is the role of the prefrontal cortex?

A

found on the frontal lobe it controls thinking, exercise, planning and impulse control

19
Q

what is the role of the frontal lobe?

A

enables thinking and problem-solving

20
Q

what is the role of Broca’s area?

A

it enables speech production

21
Q

where and what is the motor cortex?

A

in the frontal lobe running along central sulcus, allows us to exercise fine control of movement

22
Q

what is the role of the temporal lobe?

A

enables memory

23
Q

what is the role of the parietal lobe?

A

it brings together senses

24
Q

where and what is the Somato sensory cortex?

A

in the parietal lobe running along the central sulcus, it is used to sense our body eg. hot, cold, pain

25
Q

what is the role of the occipital lobe?

A

enables vision by receiving information from the eyes via the optic nerve