Ways of Investigating the Brain Flashcards

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1
Q

What two techniques are used for observing activities of the brain?

A
  • Non-invasive

- Invasive

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2
Q

Define non-invasive:

A

Do not involve breaking the skin with an electrode, surgery

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3
Q

Define invasive:

A

Where the skin is broken

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4
Q

What are the four ways of investigating the brain?

A
  • Functional Magnetic —-Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
  • Electroencephalpgram (EEG)
  • Event-related Potentials (ERPs)
  • Post-mortem examinations
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5
Q

Describe functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI):

A
  • Detecting the changes in blood oxygenation and flow that occurs as result of neural activity
  • Produces 3D images
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6
Q

Advantage of fMRI:

A
  • No radiation
  • Virtually risk-free
  • Non-invasive
  • High spatial resolution
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7
Q

Weakness of fMRI:

A
  • Expensive
  • Only clear images if person perfectly still
  • Low temporal resolution (5s lag-time)
  • Only measure blood flow not individual neurons so no precise location of brain activity
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8
Q

Describe electroencephalogram (EEG):

A

-Measures and records the electrical activity of your brain

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9
Q

Strengths of EEG:

A
  • Diagnosis of conditions i.e epilepsy
  • Deeper understanding of sleep stages
  • High temporal resolution
  • Non-invasive
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10
Q

Limitations of EEG:

A
  • Low spatial resolution

- Generalising of neural activity

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11
Q

Describe event-related potentials (ERP):

A

-Measurement of your brain activity during sensory, cognitive, or motor event which have been isolated

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12
Q

Strengths of ERP:

A
  • More specific so higher temporal resolution
  • Practical application of measuring cognitive functions
  • Non-invasive
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13
Q

Weakness of EPR:

A
  • Lack of standardisation

- Background noise and extraneous materials must be eliminated

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14
Q

Describe post-mortem examination:

A
  • Analysis of death person

- On those with rare disorders or experience unusual deficits in mental process

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15
Q

Strengths of post-mortems:

A
  • Vital in foundation of understanding
  • Broca and Wernicke relied on PM
  • Improved medical knowledge
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16
Q

Weakness of post-mortems:

A
  • Very invasive
  • Causation
  • Observed damage may not be linked to deficits
  • Ethical issues around consent
  • I.e HM had lost the ability to form memories so unable to provide consent