Biopsychology - 5) Plasticity and Functional Recovery of the Brain after Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

Plasticity

A

The brains ability to physically and functionally adapt and change in response to trauma, new experiences and learning

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2
Q

Who carried out the study into plasticity?

A

Maguire et al

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3
Q

Who was Maguire et al’s study into?

A

Study into the brains of London taxi drivers

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4
Q

Findings of Maguire et al’s study into London taxi drivers

A

Larger grey matter volume in their brains
Positive correlation between an increasing grey matter and the longer the individuals had been taxi drivers

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5
Q

Functional recovery

A

The ability of the brain to transfer the functions of areas damaged through trauma, to other healthy parts of the brain, thus allowing normal functioning to carry on

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6
Q

3 methods of functional recovery and what they are

A

Neural unmasking - dormant synapses are activated to compensate for damaged areas of the brain, these receive higher input and new pathways are created
Axonal sprouting - new blood vessels and pathways around the damaged area so new pathways are created
Recruitment of homologous areas - areas on opposite hemisphere do specific task. No new pathways are created

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7
Q

Gender differences in functional recovery

A

Research shows that women recover quicker than men
Biologically there’s no reason for this to happen
Difference is potentially due to social factors (E.g. men less likely to accept help with recovery than women)

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8
Q

Age differences in functional recovery

A

The older you are the longer the process is

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9
Q

3rd factor that contributes to differences in functional recovery

A

Education

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10
Q

Who found that there are educational differences in functional recovery

A

Schneider et al

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11
Q

How did Schneider at al find there are education differences in functional recovery?

A

Found that patients with equivalent of a college education are 7x more likely than those who didn’t finish school to be disability-free 1 year after brain injury

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12
Q

Evidence of plasticity other than Maguire et al

A

As we age rarely used connections are deleted and frequently used connections are strengthened (E.g. French words are forgotten when they haven’t been revisited for a number of years)

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13
Q

What does more plasticity of the brain result in?

A

More efficient functional recovery

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14
Q

How does functional recovery go against localisation and lateralisation of function?

A

It could not occur if the brain was ficsed

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15
Q

What type of process is functional recovery?

A

A voluntary process
Practice is needed to regain a particular function

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