T1L11 global brain activity Flashcards
brain rhythms
eg sleep and wake, steps of walking, menstruation
electroencephalogram (EEG)
- lots of electrodes all over your head
- pyramidal cells generate small fields
- only detectable if large population of neurons activated in synchrony
- this population must be aligned in parallel so they summate rather than cancel each other out
synchronous activity
- amplitude of EEG signal partly depends on how synchronous underlying activity is
- number of cells, timing, total excitation
brain rhythms
learn this I guess - s10
generation of synchronous rhythms
one neuron oscillator:
Thalamic cells have a set of voltage-gated ion channels that allow each cell to generate rhythmic, self-sustaining discharge patterns, even in the absence of external inputs.
The rhythmic activity of each thalamic pacemaker neuron then becomes synchronised with many other thalamic cells via a hand-clapping kind of collective interaction.
function of brain rhythms
- maybe meaningless byproduct of other shit
- activity of coordination
- sensory input
sleep
- reduced motor activity
- decreased response to stimulation
- stereotypic postures
- easily reversible
functions:
- conservation of energy
- cognition
- thermoregulation
- neural maturation and mental health
3 functional states of sleep
- awake
- non REM
- REM
see s17
other imaging techniques than eeg
- structural
- CT (computerised tomography)
- MRI - functional
- PET (positron emission tomography)
- fMRI
ct
- based on xray absorption
- bone white, csf black
- diagnose tumours or haemorrhaging
radiation
mri
- completely safe
- better spatial resolution
- better discrimination between white and grey matter
- can be adapted to detect changed in blood flow fMRI
magnetic field aligns protons and the spin produces a measurable mr
pet
- blood volume
- radiation
- sensitive to whole brain
- can use tracers
- spatial resolution 10 mm
all functional imaging is comparison with baseline
BOLD (fMRI)
- blood oxygen
- no radiation
- 1mm spatial res
- some regions hard to image eg near sinus
all functional imaging is comparison with baseline
BOLD signal
HRF
blood-oxygen-dependant contrast
HRF- haemodynamic response function (changes of BOLD signal over time)