lecture 5 Flashcards
find central nervous system info in textbook
textbook
when do changes in neural development happen?
an event can influence events that will follow, but not those that precede it
what is the difference between absolute and relative timing?
absolute: days since conception
relative: precedes or follows eye opening
If A comes before B, can A influence B?
yes, but B cannot influence A
where do changes in neural development happen and which structures are affected?
developmental subdivisions along the length, radius, & circumference of the neural tube precede & presage functional subdivisions
what happens to structures of sperm during changes in neural development?
the tail becomes the spinal cord as the head becomes the brain, vertebrae differ in top/bottom dimensions, and the radius determines internal organization of segments
what is spina bifida?
failure in closure of bottom neural tube (spinal cord)
what problems do people with anencephaly or encephalocele have?
failure in closure of top (brain)
what happens if the cell fails to develop? (cell proliferation)
- no proliferation (production) of
neurons beyond prenatal period (sort of) - neuroblasts produce a definite and limited number of cells
- produce specific types of cells - contain subpopulations (lineages)
- each precursor cell produces a limited number of cells
- signal to stop proliferating is self-contained (not determined by age or position)
what happens if a cell fails to migrate?
- passive displacement evolutionarily “older” areas of brain): existing cells are pushed outward as new cells are produced
- active migration (“newer” areas of the brain): cells actively move from the point of production to eventual destination
what is the difference between covergent and divergent connections to cells?
covergent: many to one
divergent: one to many
explain the frontal cortex
- largest area of cortex human brain
- largest proportional increase in seize over the course of evolution
- longer to reach maturity than any other area of the brain (puberty)
explain the prefrontal cortex
- subserves “highest” cognitive abilities
- reasoning, problem solving, intentional, conscious behaviours
explain intentionality
- planning, goal-directed, means-end behaviour
- acting on one object as a mean to the goal of acting on another object
what is Phenylketonuria (PKU)?
a recessive disorders causing an inability to metabolize phenylalanine (amino acid in milk, eggs, bread, fish)
- phenylalanine (Phe) builds up in blood and interferes with brain cell development.