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psych paper 2
biopsychology
localisation of function
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grace sawtell
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what is localisation of function?
different
areas
of the brain are responsible for different
physical
and
psychological
functions
π location of motor cortex
frontal
lobe
function of motor cortex
controls
voluntary
movements
ππΌ location of somatosensory cortex
parietal
lobe
function of somatosensory cortex
processes
sensory
information
π location of visual cortex
occipital
lobe
function of visual cortex
receives and processes
visual
information
ππΌ location of auditory cortex
temporal
lobe
function of auditory cortex
processes
sound
information
π£οΈ location of broca's area
left
frontal
lobe
function of broca's area
responsible for
speech production
what happens if broca's area becomes damaged?
aphasia
slow
speech
lack of
fluency
π location of wernicke's area
left
temporal
lobe
function of wernicke's area
language comprehension
what happens if wernicke's area becomes damaged?
aphasia
fluent
but
meaningless
speech
define hemispheric lateralisation
certain
mental
processes are mainly
controlled
by one
hemisphere
what is the left hemisphere responsible for?
language
logic
analytical
tasks
what is the right hemisphere responsible for?
spatial
abilities
facial
recognition
perception
what is the corpus callosum?
connects the two hemispheres so they can
communicate
β localisation
strong scientific support
Peterson
et al -
PET
scans to establish
broca
and
wernicke's
area
provides
objective
evidence
β localisation
case studies
Phineas Gage
- damage to
frontal
lobe caused personality changes
frontal lobe is involved in
personality
,
decision-making
and
self-control
real-life
support
β localisation
brain plasticity
other areas can
adapt
and take over functions
brain is more
flexible
than suggested
brain has
holistic
nature
what does split-brain research investigate?
hemispheric lateralisation
what's a corpus callosotomy?
corpus callosum
is severed to treat
epilepsy
who researched split-brain?
sperry
π sperry's procedure for split-brain research
effects of severing
corpus callosum
11
epileptic patients undergone split-brain surgery
controlled lab experiments using a
tachistoscope
flashed
images
or
words
to left or right visual field
findings of sperry's split-brain research
visual task
right
hemisphere saw the image but couldn't speak
left
hemisphere verbalised image
tactile task
right
hemisphere understands object but couldn't produce speech
left
hemisphere could name and describe it
what did gazzanigas find out about split-brain?
right hemisphere has better
facial recognition
β split-brain research
empirical evidence for hemisphere
left hemisphere dominant for
language
right hemisphere handles
visual-spatial
tasks
supports modern
neuroscience
β split-brain research
lacks applicability
research was based on
11
patients with
epilepsy
who underwent a
corpus callosotomy
unique
circumstances
lowers
external
validity
β split-brain research
artificial tasks
flashing
words
or
images
in everyday life, input is processed
bilaterally
limits
real-world
relevance
define brain plasticity
ability to change and adapt
structure
and
function
in response to
learning
,
experience
or
damage
what is plasticity triggered by?
life
experience
learning
new skills
brain
damage
or
trauma
types of plasticity
developmental
- changes during growth
adaptive
- changes following injury
π key research for plasticity: maguire et al
MRI
scans of london
taxi
drivers
more grey matter in
posterior hippocampus
positive
correlation with time spent as a taxi driver
π key research for plasticity: kΓΌhn et al
played mario for
30
minutes a day over
2
months
increased grey matter in
hippocampus
,
prefrontal
cortex and
cerebellum
define functional recovery
undamaged
areas of the brain
compensate
for
damaged
areas
what triggers functional recovery?
trauma
rehabilitation
age
process of functional recovery
neuronal unmasking
axonal sprouting
reformation
of
blood vessels
recruitment
of
homologous
areas
π€ neural unmasking
brain contains
dormant
synapses
after damage, these become
activated
allowing for new neural pathways to form
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