10: Brain Plasticity Flashcards

1
Q

In what period is there rapid neuron growth in children?

A

Birth to 2 years old

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2
Q

What determines if a synapse is pruned?

A

How much it’s used and how effective it is

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3
Q

What is the main difference in the number of synapses in the visual cortex for blind people?

A

They have more synapses as they’re unable to prune out ineffective connections

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4
Q

What is hebbian modification?

A

neurons that fire together, wire together

Neurons that fire out of sink lose their link

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5
Q

When does pruning take place?

A

Around the age of 2 or 3

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6
Q

What is a hemispherectomy?

A

Early removal of a brain hemisphere

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7
Q

What is the effect of removing a brain hemisphere in early life?

A

There is little effect as the brain can adapt

Can be a few issues with movement

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8
Q

How does plasticity change in adulthood?

A

The brain can still reorganise as a result of learning from experiance

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9
Q

What are the two forms of plasticity in adulthood?

A

Use-dependent

Injury dependent

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10
Q

What is the function of the homunculus?

A

Maping the body onto the sensory and motor cortexes

There is the same basic layout but a lot of individual differences in how it’s organised

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11
Q

What was the study with musicians which explained why we have differences in body mapping?

A

String players had a larger and stronger brain activation to sensations on their fingers than a control group because they’ve been using them for so long. Their brain has adapted
Correlates with how early they learnt to play the instrument

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12
Q

What was found about finger representations in blind people that used three fingers to read braille?

A

The mapping for the 3 fingers overlapped so they were unable to tell which finger the sensation was occuring on

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13
Q

What adaptations are made in the brain’s of blind people?

A

More space donated to sound and touch instead of sight

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14
Q

What evidence is there of cross modal activity in blind people?

A

When reading braille, the visual cortex was activated as it has taken over that function

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15
Q

How do strokes demonstrate plasticity in the adult brain?

A

Motor and cognitive function can be recovered in the proceeding 3 months

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16
Q

What is the mechanism of plasticity in adults?

A

Long term potentiation

Repeated neuron fire strengthens the synapse

17
Q

What was Draganski’s 2004 study into the brain and learning?

A

When adults spent 3 months learning to juggle, their hippocampus got bigger which shows how we can change our brain structure through experiance and learning

18
Q

How are stem cells linked to plasticity?

A

neural stem cells (Spinal cord) generate neural progenitor cells which create new neurons

New neurons take about 2 months to mature

19
Q

What things aid neurogenesis?

A
Enriched environment 
Exercize 
Learning
Diet
Antidepressants
20
Q

What things inhibit neurogenesis?

A

Stress
Ageing
Neurological disorders

21
Q

How is exercize linked to plasticity?

A

rats given a running wheel had improved cognition

Also seen in adults aged 65

22
Q

How does brain biology change as we age?

A

We lose white matter volume as we age, especially in the prefrontal cortex