Week 3: Inferential Goals and Brainstem and Cerebellum Function Flashcards

1
Q

What is scientific inference in psychology?

A

Scientific validation of ideas relies on making inferences based on available evidence

Data are not all created equal! - Differences in “quality”

Inference requires judging how strongly data support a claim

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2
Q

What are the requirements for making an inference?

A

Evaluating the quality of the evidence
Does the measure assess what the researcher says it assesses?
Is the evidence reliably reproducible?
Is the evidence measured quantitatively and objectively?

Evaluating how the evidence relates to theory
Is the evidence consistent with one theory or multiple theories?
Do any theories fail to explain the evidence?

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3
Q

What is a quantitative measurement?

A

Allows us to put a numerical value on a measurement
“Tall” is no longer subjective or relative
Permits objective measurement by others

Perhaps most importantly, quantitative measurement allows for comparison
Of groups of individuals
Of the same individual through time

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4
Q

What do we do with samples and populations and what are the potential pitfalls?

A

In most cases, we measure something about a sample of people and seek to form generalized conclusions about the population at large

What is true of the sample/population need not be true of the individual

What is true of the sample need not be true of another sample (even if both are drawn from the same population)

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5
Q

What two factors should measures contain for valid inferences?

A

Measures should be both reliable and valid

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6
Q

What is reliability?

A

Refers to how “repeatable” or consistent a measure is

If you were to assess the same construct in the same way using the same method of measurement, do you tend to get the same results?

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7
Q

What is Validity?

A

Refers to the degree to which a measure assesses the thing it is purported to assess

Is the construct you seek to measure actually related to the measurement?

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8
Q

What was the hot topic of the 19th century that was discussed?

A

Racial hierarchy, tried to use cranial capacity to determine that whites were smarter. Used mustard seeds but was not repeatable and then used buckshot.

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9
Q

What was the problem with the cranial capacity issue in terms of reliability and validity?

A

Problem: Cranial capacity does not really relate to intelligence… It’s not the size, it’s how you use it

But cranial capacity does relate to overall body size
Morton’s measure is conflated with body size (and potentially nutrition, etc.)

If the measure is not a valid reflection of the construct of interest, neither are the inferences based on the measure.

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10
Q

What are the three measures of central tendency?

A

Mean (average score)
Median (the “middle” score in a distribution)
Mode (the most common score)

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11
Q

What are the measures of variability?

A

Range Measures

Standard Deviation

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12
Q

What can occur between the use of different measures?

A

Quantitative measurement provides the basis for making defensible scientific inferences that are grounded in data

However, choosing an appropriate measure is not always straightforward—measures must be reliable and valid

Even with good measures though, there is a problem that is created by variability of data across different samples

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13
Q

How likely would a difference be between a treatment and control group of an unsuccessful drug?

A

A truly ineffective treatment would mean both groups score the same
So a large difference would be very unlikely if the treatment were ineffective
If we see a large difference, conclude the treatment is effective

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14
Q

What can alter the values of two sample groups?

A

Due to variability in samples though, the groups won’t have exactly the same mean score even if the treatment is ineffective

Usually small differences, sometimes positive, sometimes negative …but sometimes a very large difference will occur due to chance

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15
Q

Why are multiple studies needed?

A

False positives, cause the wrong effect to be accounted for.

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16
Q

What is the difference between practical significance and statistical significance?

A

Differences that are larger than would be expected by chance are considered to be “statistically significant”

This is a separate issue from “practical significance” (useful result).

17
Q

What are some of the issues relating evidence to theory?

A

Issues when evaluating scientific claims based on statistical evidence
Can another theory explain the same data?
Are there theories that cannot explain the data?

If other theories can explain the same data, future work will need to try and distinguish between those theories!

If there are theories that are unable to explain the current data, they may need to be modified, or potentially abandoned

18
Q

What is the brainstem/ANS associated with?

A

States of consciousness

19
Q

What is the Cerebellum/Motor System associated with?

A

Feedback control of movement

20
Q

What comprises the central nervous system (CNS)

A

Brain and spinal cord

21
Q

What comprises the peripheral nervous system (PNS)

A

Somatic Nervous System
– Voluntary
– Motor and Sensory

Autonomic Nervous System
– Involuntary
– Heart-rate, respiration, sweating
– Stress, arousal, “fight-or-flight”

22
Q

What are the two divisions of the ANS? (autonomic nervous system)

A
Sympathetic Nervous System
– Emotional arousal, stress, fear
– “Fight or Flight” response
– Increases heart-rate, respiration,
perspiration, pupils dilate.
Parasympathetic Nervous System
– “Rest and digest”
– Lowers heart-rate, respiration
– Increases stomach, intestine
activity (digestion)
– “opposes” the sympathetic nervous
system
23
Q

What are some functions of the Brainstem

A

Autonomic nervous system functions

Relay between cortex and spinal cord cortex and cerebellum

24
Q

What comprises the Brainstem?

A

Medulla oblongata, pons, and midbrain

25
Q

What is the function of the Medulla?

A

Autonomic nervous system functions

Controls heart-rate, respiration, regulation of blood pressure, body temperature
Reflex centres for coughing, sneezing, swallowing, vomiting

26
Q

What are the two discussed disorders of consciousness?

A

Persistent Vegetative State and “Locked-in” Syndrome

27
Q

What occurs during a persistent vegetative state?

A

Severe damage to upper brain (hemispheres and cortex)

If brainstem is not damaged, autonomic nervous system functions can remain

sometimes normal respiration, control of heart rate, some face and eye movements remain

Patients have no conscious awareness

28
Q

What occurs during a “Locked in syndrome” state? What causes this?

A

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) or Motor Neuron disease – Loss of motor neurons to spinal cord
or Brain injury (following accident)

Intact cerebrum and brainstem, but
“disconnected” from spinal cord

Normal cognitive function, vision, and
hearing, but patients cannot move

Patients may be fully conscious and
aware, but totally unresponsive

29
Q

How can Persistent Vegetative State and “Locked-in” Syndrome be distinguished?

A

“Locked-in” patients appear the same as those with persistent vegetative state

Cortex is fully functioning in Locked-in patients
What is their conscious awareness?
Functional MRI to detect brain activity
and allow some communication

30
Q

What are the functions of the Cerebellum

A

Hind brain (latin for little brain)

Sense of balance and co-ordination of complex movement

Motor learning – fine adjustment of movement based on feedback

31
Q

What does primary motor cortex activity lead to?

A

Movement (muscle contraction), found anterior to central sulcus

Remember Homunculus distribution.

32
Q

What does sensory cortex cortex activity lead to?

A

Leads to sensation, found posterior to central sulcus

Remember Homunculus distribution.

33
Q

What are motor programs for movement?

A

Movements planned and “programmed” in the brain before initiation, like a computer program (theory from 1960’s)

Brain creates program just before movement.
OR
Brain retrieves program for learnt skilled actions – eg signature, tennis swing, etc

34
Q

What is the feedback loop for a planned action?

A

Vision/Proprioception/sensation is compared to the desired and expected result, learning occurs

35
Q

What are the three levels of the brain and their functions?

A

Going from Lower to higher

  1. Brainstem, Cerebellum Autonomic nervous system functions (heart-rate, respiration, blood pressure) Movement co-ordination (Low Level)
  2. Limbic System Fear/threat learning (amygdala) memory, navigation through environment (hippocampus) (Higher Level)
  3. Cerebral Hemispheres – Cortex Planning, reasoning, problem-solving (frontal lobe)
    Language (temporal lobe)
    Visual Perception and Action – perceiving complex world and interacting within it. (occipital and parietal lobe; motor cortex) (Highest Level)
36
Q

What did the Stroop experiment show?

A

Reading seems to be an autonomic process which are hard to override.