Plasticity and functional recovery of the brain Flashcards

1
Q

What does plasticity describe?

A

o Describes the brain’s tendency to change and adapt as a result of experience and learning

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2
Q

Maguire et al. research into plasticity?

A

o Studied the brains of London taxi drivers and found significantly more volume of grey matter in the posterior hippocampus that in a matched control group
o This part of the brain is associated with the development of spatial and navigational skills, London cab driers have to be able to recall city streets and know routes
o Suggests that the result of this learning experience is to alter the structure of the taxi drivers’ brains

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3
Q

What is functional recovery?

A

o A form of plasticity
o Following damage through trauma, the brain’s ability to redistribute or transfer functions usually performed by a damaged area to other, undamaged areas

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4
Q

What happens in the brain during recovery?

A

o Secondary neural pathways that would not typically be able to carry out certain functions are activated to enable functioning to continue
Structural changes:
o Axonal sprouting - growth of new nerve endings which connect with other undamaged nerve cells to form new neuronal pathways
o Reformation of blood vessels
o Recruitment of homologous areas on the opposite side of the brain to perform specific tasks

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5
Q

Evaluation points for plasticity and functional recovery?

A
\+ Practical application 
– Negative plasticity 
\+ Age and plasticity 
\+ Support from animal studies 
\+ Concept of cognitive reserve
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6
Q

What is the practical application for plasticity and functional recovery?

A

o Contributed to the field of neurorehabilitation
o Spontaneous recovery tends to slow down after a number a weeks so forms of physical therapy required
o Shows that although the brain may have ability to fix itself further intervention is required to be completely successful

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7
Q

Negative plasticity in plasticity and functional recovery?

A

o Brains ability to rewire itself can sometimes have maladaptive behavioural consequences
o Prolonged drug use, for example, has been shown to result in cognitive functioning as well as an increased risk of dementia in later in life

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8
Q

Effects of age on plasticity?

A

o Functional plasticity tend to reduce with age
o Research has shown using fMRI a reduced motor cortex activity in novice golfers (40-60) compared to a control group
o Suggesting more efficient neural representations after training, shows that neural plasticity does continue throughout the lifespan

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9
Q

What support is there from animal studies for plasticity and functional recovery?

A

o Early evidence of neuroplasticity and functional recovery was derived from animal studies
o One researcher was sewing the eye of a kitten shut and analysis the brain’s cortical responses
o It found that the area of the visual cortex association with the shut eye wan’t idle but continued to process information from the open eye

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10
Q

What is the concept of cognitive reserve in plasticity and functional recovery?

A

o Evidence suggests that a person’s education attainment may influence how all the brain functionally adapts after injury
o Been discovered that the more time brain injury parties had spent in education (this was taken as their cognitive reserve) the greater their chances of a disability-free recovery

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