ways of studying the brain Flashcards
What are the 4 types of studying the brain you need to know?
- post mortem
2.fMRI
3.EEG
4.ERP
describe a post mortem
used to understand neurological behaviour
* looking for abnormalities
E.g Broca’s patient tan - speech problems found a lesion area now known as Broca’s area for speech production
Strengths of a post mortem
+ High spatial resolution - microscopic detail as able to go to neuronal level not available with other techniques
+ Allows for deeper investigation - hypothalamus / hippocampus
+ played a central role in understanding the origins of schizophrenia / structural abnormalities / changes it NT systems
Post mortems limitatioms
- Poor temporal validity - occurs after death so it is correlational between the damage and behaviour in life
- causality ? doesn’t tell us why they died may have been due to wrong drug treatment / other factors
Doesn’t prove causality of experiences
what is a fMRI ?
Uses magnetic field and a computer
* Measures brain activity whilst PPT perfirns a task
* measures bloodflow identifying increased neurological activity as demand for O2 is higher as is being used
* Allows researchers to make maps of what is involved within the brain
fMRI strengths
+ non invasive
+ creates detailed spatial images - precisely identidying regions and patterns overtime as ppt completes tasks - seeing how the brain responds
+ no harmful radiation
+ Objective and reliable rather than verbal reports
fMRI limitations
- not a direct measurement but just for particular areas (general) therefore not truly quantitative
- Critics argue it overlooks networked nature of the brain by only looking at specific areas and that it is the communication between areas that provides vital information - so it snapshots not informing of how two places communicate in terms of neural pathways
- measures bloodflow but we think in electrical impulses low validity
- Requires ppt to be still so the tasks that can be investigated are limites
what is an EEG?
Electrodes placed on the scalp that records the summation of activity o 1,000 neurones near the electrodes
Provides a general measure of brain activity
The electrical signals measured by voltmenter is graphed as waves
- Can be used to detect brain disorders e.g epilepsy Or even slowing of the brain.
- Alpha, beta, delta and theta waves.
EEG strengths
+ high temporal resolution - provides a recording of brain activity in real time - improving utility
+ Allowing for a causal explanations to be made
+ quick way of diagnosing abnormal brain activity e.g epileptic seizures + not invasive
EEG limitation
- only measures superficial / exterior brain areas so is not able to measure deeper structural activities
- poor spatial as electrodes pick up activity from 1,000 nearby neurones
- electrodes can be implanted on animals but not ethically viables on humans
- if two electrodes are nearby it may get confused to identify where the precise location of activity
May not be identifying exact source
What is an ERP?
Uses electrodes fixed to participants scalp to detect neuronal activity in response to a stimulus introduced by the researcher
Takes dozens of presentaitons to a stimulus to work out where the specific electrical response is
Readings averages to remove ‘noise’ in recordings
ERP strengths
+ due to the continuous nature of the processing, it is possible to identify how a manipulation of a stimulus may impact processing.
+ non invasive
+ high temproal validity - miliseconds
+ Used by neuroscientists to study how sensorry and cognition afffects physiological brain activity - as able to isolate and study individual processes (ie.cognition)
+ can be replicated for quantitative data → flexible process
ERPs limitation
- Large number of trials required to gather meaningful data - timely
- poor spatial as electrodes pick up activity from 1,000 nearby neurones
- electrodes can be implanted on animals but not ethically viables on humans
- Threshold of electrical activity picked up, nothing less, ignoring internal neural activity and only detecting changes in cortex
Ethics of all 4
FMRis/EEG/ERP - non invasive
post mortem - Highly invasive family consent needed
spatial resolution - fmri
very good accurate within 3mm
+ can be used anywhere throughout the brain