Studying the Brain

Cards (14)

  • Cognitive neuroscience - concerned with the study of the biological processes that underlie cognition with a specific focus around neural connections
  • 4 methods of brain study:
    • fMRI
    • EEG
    • ERP
    • post-mortem
  • Post-mortem examinations
    an examination of the brain once the patient has died.
    • used to understand neurological explanations for behaviour by looking for abnormalities compared to a control
    • Broca's patient (Tan) was found to have a lesion on an area now known as Broca's area
  • PM Advantages:
    • detailed examination of the brain which isn't possible with other methods
    • deeper investigation into the inside structures of the brain (e.g. hypothalamus, hippocampus)
    • played a central role in understanding the origins of schizophrenia - structural abnormalities/changes in neurotransmitter systems (Harrison et al)
  • PM Disadvantages:
    • the reason for a patient's death/stage of disease etc. may impact the brain
    • how long a person has been dead for also affects the brain and therefore PM results
    • retrospective approach to research which is problematic due to not being able to follow anything up/provide treatment
  • fMRI
    • measuring brain activity while a person performs a task
    • looks at blood flow to identify increased neurological activity due to increased demand for oxygen
  • fMRI Advantages:
    • non invasive
    • doesn't involve any harmful radiation
    • objective and reliable rather than verbal reports
  • fMRI Disadvantages:
    • not a direct measurement but just for particular areas so not quite general and therefore not truly quantitative
    • it overlooks networked nature of the brain by only looking at specific areas and that it is the communication between areas that provides vital information
  • EEG
    • electrodes placed on the scalp to detect small electrical charges resulting from activity of brain cells
    • can be used to detect brain disorders e.g. epilepsy or even slowing of the brain
  • EEG Advantages:
    • provides a recording of brain activity in real time
    • allows for casual explanations to be made
    • a quick way of diagnosing abnormal brain activity e.g. epileptic seizures
  • EEG Disadvantages:
    • only measures superficial/exterior areas of the brain and is not able to measure deeper structural activities
    • electrodes can be implanted on animals, but this is not ethically viable of humans
    • if an electrode is nearby, it may get confused about where the precise location of activity is - might identify neighbouring locations instead of actual source
  • ERPs
    • presenting a person with a stimulus and measuring small voltage changes in the brain that are triggered
    • waves of sensory ERPs are sent and findings are gathered through repetition
  • ERPs Advantages:
    • due to the continuous nature of the processing, it is possible to identify how manipulation of a stimulus impacts processing
    • the readings can be in a covert way, to avoid predictability/pre-planning
  • ERPs Disadvantages:
    • large number of trials required to gather meaningful data
    • threshold of electrical activity picked up - ignoring internal neural activity and only detecting changes in cortex