Ch 23 , 25: Plasticity Flashcards

1
Q

Stage 1: Neurogenesis

A

Neural stem cells produce neuro blast and glial blast from progenitor cells. Neurons and glia also produce in hippocampus and olfactory bulb.

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2
Q

Stage 2: Cell Migration

A

Cells migrate along radial glial fibers

continues to 8 mo after birth

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3
Q

Stage 3: Cell Differentiation

A

Specialization of the blast cells.
Neural-> interneuron and projecting neurons
Glial-> Oligodendroglia and Astrocyte
Complete at birth

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4
Q

Stage 4; Neural Maturation

A

Development of dendrites in 2 step;
dendritic arborization and growth of dendritic spines (slow process)
Development of axons are faster and mechanisms (structure, distance, signals, and branches) Continues after birth

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5
Q

Stage 5 and 6; Synapse formation and pruning

A

Gene, biochemical, and electrical signaling guide formation of synapses.

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6
Q

Experience expectant

A

Depend on the presences of certain sensory experiences for organization

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7
Q

Experience dependent

A

refer to generation synapses that are unique to and individual organism

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8
Q

Myelogenesis

A

Cerebral Maturation throughout lifespan

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9
Q

Piaget: stages of cognitive development

A

Sensorimotor(birth-18-24mo) Object permanence
Preoperational (2-6yrs) can represent things with words and drawings
Concrete operation(7-11 yrs) conservation, mathematical transformation
Formal operation (>12 yrs) abstract reasoning

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10
Q

Growth Spurts

A

Large increase in mass of brain in irregular periods due to increase in metabolism, synapse, blood volume to brain

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11
Q

Environmental Deprivation

A

Structure can be molded into different forms. Influenced by external and internal factors (more disruption after 18 mo)

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12
Q

brain injury and plasticity

A

effects depend on behavior, speech, extent and location of the damages and age during the time the injury occur

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13
Q

Effects of early brain lesions on brain structure later in life

A

plastic changes in brain that support recovery; intact circuits of the brain re-orgainze, new circuitry is generated, and neurons and glial are generated to replace the lost neurons

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14
Q

Evidence of plasticity on brain structure later in life

A

cortical connectivity; abnormal connection after day 1, hemidecortications-> connection expand and improve function

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15
Q

Neural Plasticity can be studied through

chapter 25

A

observable behavior, cerebral maps, synaptic organization, physiological organization, molecular structure, and mitosis.

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16
Q

Somatosensory Plasticity

A

Motor and sensory maps can be altered by experience - not alway adaptive

17
Q

Plasticity in synaptic organization

A

dendritic arborizations; synapse number and size

18
Q

Plasticity in physiological organization: Long-term potentiation

A

enhanced synaptic transmission after electrical stimulation of a cell
Hippocampus

19
Q

Plasticity in physiological organization; Kindling

A

development of persistent seizure activity after repeated exposure to an initially subconvulsant stimulus
Amygdala

20
Q

Plasticity in Molecular Structure Epigenetics

A

allows researcher to see what genes are affected by certain experiences

21
Q

Plasticity in Mitotic Activity

A

Olfactory bulb and hippocampus produce new neurons in adults

22
Q

examples of functional restitution

A

Recovery from aphasia;
Head-injury pt (vs stroke) show most rapid and most complete recovery
Deficits are least severe in anomic(naming object) pt and most severe in global aphasic(every aspect)
Rate of recovery similar in all patients
During recovery, progress to other stages

23
Q

Recovery from Aphasia

A

Most recovery in first 3 mo
Younger pt better recovery
Right hemisphere is more resistant to damage

24
Q

Function restitution; return to daily life

A

when employment is used as a measure of recovery
sibling relationship suffer more along with social and leisure activities
Measure of recovery often overlook the strategies the person is using

25
Q

Variable affecting recovery

A

Young age
female and left handedness
Higher iq intelligence
and optimistic/positive personality

26
Q

Plasticity in the injured brain

A

functional imaging after cerebral injury-
post stroke changes; reorganization take place bilaterally
capacity for reorganization declines with increases in stroke size and age
considerable variability exists between patients