Physiological/Behavioral Neuroscience Flashcards

1
Q

Hindbrain

A

myelencephalon/medulla: reflexes, sleep, attention, movement
metencephalon: pons (connects brain to spine), cerebellum (muscle coordination, balance, posture)
reticular formation: oldest part of brain: alertness, thirst, sleep and involuntary muscles e.g. heart

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2
Q

mesencephalon (midbrain)

A

tectum: vision & hearing
tegmentum: reticular formation, sensorimotor system, analgesic effect of opiates

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3
Q

diencephalon

A

thalamus: channels sensory info to cerebral cortex
hypothalamus: controls ANS biological motivationsn e.g. hunger & thirst, pituitary gland

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4
Q

telencephalon

A

limbic system: four F’s: - fleeing, feeding, fighting, fornicating
hippocampus: memory
amygdala: emotional reactions like fear and anger
cingulate gyrus: links areas dealing with emotion and decisions

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5
Q

cerebral cortex

A

frontal: speech, reasoning, problem solving
occipital: vision
parietal: somatosensory
temporal: hearing, Wernicke’s (speech)
gyri (bumps) and sulci (fissures)

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6
Q

meninges

A

connective tissues protecting brain and spinal cord

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7
Q

superior and inferior colliculus

A

superior: controls visual reflexes
inferior: controls auditory reflexes

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8
Q

basal ganglia

A

large, voluntary muscle movements. degeneration in Parkinson’s & Huntington’s

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9
Q

aphasia

A

language disorder
Broca’s: left frontal lobe - difficulty speaking
Wernicke’s: left temporal lobe - doesn’t understand how to choose words

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10
Q

agnosia

A

difficulty processing sensory info

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11
Q

hyperphagia

A

overeating with no satiation of hunger. damage to ventromedial region of hypothalamus

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12
Q

fMRI

A

oxygen flow in different areas

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13
Q

PET

A

positron emission tomography: scans glucose metabolism

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14
Q

glial cells

A

support neurons
oligodendrocytes: provide myelin in CNS
Schwann: provide myelin in PNS

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15
Q

acetylcholine

A

neuromuscular junction to cause contraction of skeletal muscles, PNS

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16
Q

monoamines

A

indolamines e.g. serotonin

catecholamines e.g. dopamine

17
Q

amino acids: glutamate and GABA

A

glutamate: excitatory
GABA: inhibitory

18
Q

non-REM sleep

A

half an hour:

0: alpha waves (neural synchrony) - relaxed, drowsy
1: irregular theta waves - loss of responsiveness to stimuli, fleeting thoughts
2: theta waves - sleep spindles (fast frequency bursts of brain activity), muscle tension, decline in HR, respiration & temperature
3: delta waves appear. fewer sleep spindles
4: delta waves - deepest levels of sleep. growth hormones secreted

19
Q

REM sleep

A

20% of sleep
dreams
beta waves (as when awake) - neural desynchrony

20
Q

Konrad Lorenz

A

founder of ethology (study of animal behaviors)

  • imprinting
  • fixed action patterns: instinctual chains of behaviors triggered by releasing stimuli - uniform, performed by most species members, more complex than simple reflexes, cannot be interrupted
21
Q

Karl von Frisch

A

dance of the honeybees

22
Q

Wolfgang Kohler

A

showed that chimpanzees can use insight to solve problems

23
Q

Harry Harlow

A

Rhesus monkeys: social isolation, maternal stimulation

24
Q

Thorndike’s law of effect

A

(instrumental learning) successful behaviors are more likely to be repeated (cats in puzzle boxes)

25
Q

Eric Kandel

A

sea slug Aplysia - learning and memory are evidenced by changes in synapses and neural pathways