L5 - Modularity Flashcards
1
Q
What is the modular brain?
A
- Domain specific: do something in a particular domain e.g vision etc
- Mandatory: If you look at something, you read it etc.
- Fast
- Fixed Neural Architecture: will have some structure fixed within the brain e.g visual cortex etc.
- Show specific breakdown patterns
- Develop in a specific way
2
Q
How to assess cognitive impairment?
A
- Brain scans anatomical
- Interviews/behavioural assessment: what specific behaviours are abnormal.
- Normal psychometric test
- Standardised neuropsychological tests
- Unstandardised tests
3
Q
What are standardised neuropsychological tests used for?
A
To find out where lesions are in the brain.
4
Q
What are the standardised neuropsychological tests?
A
- If its 2 sd below the mean has a deficit
- WAIS Measures
- Wisconsin Card Sorting
- National Adult Reading Test
- Behavioural Inattention Test
5
Q
Describe the WAIS Measures
A
- Has a full scale measure that is split into two categories, this would continue to branch until you reach tests measuring IQ, attention etc.
6
Q
Describe the National Adult Reading Test
A
- Measure of pre-morbid IQ
- Tests pronunciation of irregular words e.g depot. If they have a high IQ they will get these correct
7
Q
Describe Standardised Tests
A
- Clear coding system
- Compare with Published Norms
- Freely available
8
Q
Describe Unstandardised Tests
A
- Probes individual problems of a particular case (can make a test for a specific person with a specific deficit - there is no standardised test)
- Absence of age-matched controls
- Controls can be put in after
9
Q
Describe some cognitive neuropsychological conditions
A
- Agnosia: cant recognise
- Prosopagnosia: cant recognise faces
- Alexia: cant recognise text
- Time Agnosia: cant order events
- Aphasia: cant communicate
- Unilateral neglect: Cant attend to one side
10
Q
What is an association test?
A
- Patients that have similar lesions do not do well on specific tasks
- Suggesting that those tasks use the same systems in the brain
11
Q
What is a disassociation test?
A
- Task 1 is impaired but 2 is not
- Suggests different systems are affected, modular roots are different
- However it could mean that one requires further processing but share the same root.
12
Q
What is a double disassociation test?
A
- Two patients
- Task 1 is impaired but 2 is not and vice versa for other patient
- E.g brocas and wernickes area
13
Q
(-) of Double Disassociation
A
- Different labs test in different ways
- People have untypical coping strategies for their brain damage
- People might have had a difficulty before the brain damage
14
Q
Describe fMRI
A
- Measures blood oxygen levels to see regional activity. (more = higher activity)
- High spatial resolution
- Records in 3D
15
Q
fMRI (-)
A
- Indirect measure of brain activity: not measuring neurones
- Slow responses: have to do a task for long period