W8 - Emotions Flashcards

1
Q

Homeostasis

A

Biological processes that keep biological variables within acceptable range

e.g., body temperature, fluid levels

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2
Q

Allostasis

A

Anticipatory corrections - prior to change in biological variables

e.g., increased fluid intake in response to increased temperature

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3
Q

The Hypothalamus

A

very important in maintaining homeostasis

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4
Q

Osmotic thirst

A

Due to increased salt intake, resulting in increased Na+ concentration in extracellular fluid

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5
Q

Subfornical organ and OVLT

A

Receptors that respond to osmotic pressure

signal the need for more water

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6
Q

ANS

A

controls many involuntary processes e.g., heart rate, digestion etc.

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7
Q

Sympathetic ANS (left)

A

prepares for fight or flight

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8
Q

Parasympathetic ANS (right)

A

resting non-emergency, digestion & rest

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9
Q

Left hemisphere (frontal & temporal lobes)

A

Behavioural activation system

-low-moderate arousal, tendency to approach

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10
Q

Right hemisphere (frontal & temporal lobes)

A

Behavioural Inhibition System

  • higher arousal, withdrawal / inhibition
  • more sensitive to emotional stimuli
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11
Q

Amygdala

A

Aggression.
-prior to an attack, corticomedial amygdala activity increases

  • direct stimulation increases chance of attack
  • extremely sensitive to potential threats
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12
Q

PTSD (hippocampus)

A

a kind of anxiety disorder.

  • many have smaller hippocampi
  • cortisol has been suggested to be involved in damaging the hippocampus
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13
Q

PTSD (Amygdala)

A
  • People with amygdala damage might not develop PTSD (unable to learn fears?)
  • People with PTSD might not be able to extinguish fears (Amygdala abnormality?)
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14
Q

Kluver-Bucy syndrome

A
  • reduced fear
  • increased sexual behavior
  • damage inn amygdala
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15
Q

Urbach-Wiethe disease

A
  • damage in amygdala
  • muted fear emotion in self
  • fail to recognise emotions in others
  • do not attend to eyes
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16
Q

Amygdala damage in humans

A
  • rate all faces equally trustworthy

- unlikely to detect emotionally charged words

17
Q

Stress

A
  • Alarm: stressor identified, SNS activation to mobilise the bodies resource
  • Resistance: SNS response declines but immune response and cortisol release in place
  • Exhaustion: prolonged stress produces fatigue impaired functions
18
Q

Hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal cortex axis

A

activates anterior pituitary releasing adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)

this travels to the adrenal cortex which causes it to secrete cortisol (stress hormone)

why?

  • short term response to need for action
  • increases blood sugar
  • improves attention and memory
19
Q

Psychoneuroimmunnology

A

study of how the nervous system and immune system affect one another

  • direct input from sympathetic nervous system to lymphoid tissue
  • via cortisol release, binds and activate leukocytes
  • damage to hippocampus