Perception 1 Flashcards
Neuroscience is concerned with discovering the ____ and ____ taking place in the physical brain
Structure and processes
Nervous system
A portion of the body consisting of neurons, nerves, and glial cells whose function is to allow different portions of the body to communicate with one another.
Neurons
Specialized cells that can receive and transmit information
Nerves
Bundles of connective tissue that allows neurons to communicate with one another and other parts of the body.
Glial cells
Cells within the nervous system that provide support to neurons.
Central nervous system
Brain and spinal chord. Conscious and voluntary actions
Peripheral nervous system
All neurons, nerves, and glial cells outside of the central nervous system. Motor and involuntary actions
Cognition mainly takes place in this system (PNS or CNS)
Central nervous system
The ____ _____ is a relay between the peripheral nervous system and the central nervous system
Spinal cord
The PNS provides the input by bringing in information from the external _____
Senses
The CNS processes information from the PNS and sends a______ as output back to the PNS
Behavioral decision
The ___PNS/CNS controls muscles to generate a behavior
PNS (eye movement and skin response studies)
True or false : involuntary responses can impact voluntary response
True (s (e.g. anger increasing impulsive decision making)
True or false : cognition can impact even involuntary responses
True (e.g. feeling fear when told there is a spider on you)
Autonomic nervous system
A portion of the PNS that connects to most organs in the body and regulates certain unconscious bodily functions. It contains the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems.
Sympathetic nervous system
A subdivision of the autonomic nervous system that unconsciously regulates certain functions of the body to prepare for immediate action.
Fight or flight response
A sympathetic nervous system response that prepares the body with increased strength and stamina in response to a perceived threat.
Parasympathetic nervous system
A subdivision of the autonomic nervous system that regulates certain bodily functions under conditions when immediate action is not needed.
Brainstem
A stalk-like structure at the base of the brain that connects it to the spinal cord and regulates involuntary functions like heart rate and breathing.
Hypothalamus
A small but highly complex cluster of neurons that lies in the center of the brain that regulates multiple involuntary behavioral functions.
Reflex action
The simplest form of autonomic behavioral responses in which the spinal chord generates the behavioral signal without the brain.
Cerebrum
The largest portion of the human brain, sitting at the top of the brain and consisting of the cerebral cortex and related structures.
A folded, layered structure that is the largest single structure and the most superficial portion of the human brain.
Cerebral cortex
Gray matter
Topmost layer of the cortex, consisting of neuronal cell bodies