localisation of function

    Cards (46)

    • what is localisation of function?
      different areas of the brain are responsible for different physical and psychological functions
    • 🚘 location of motor cortex
      frontal lobe
    • function of motor cortex
      controls voluntary movements
    • πŸ‘ƒπŸΌ location of somatosensory cortex
      parietal lobe
    • function of somatosensory cortex
      processes sensory information
    • πŸ‘€ location of visual cortex
      occipital lobe
    • function of visual cortex
      receives and processes visual information
    • πŸ‘‚πŸΌ location of auditory cortex
      temporal lobe
    • function of auditory cortex
      processes sound information
    • πŸ—£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
    • πŸ’­ 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
    • βœ… localisation
      strong scientific support
      • Peterson et al - PET scans to establish broca and wernicke's area
      • provides objective evidence
    • βœ… 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
    • ❌ 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
    • πŸ“– 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
    • βœ… split-brain research
      empirical evidence for hemisphere
      • left hemisphere dominant for language
      • right hemisphere handles visual-spatial tasks
      • supports modern neuroscience
    • ❌ split-brain research
      lacks applicability
      • research was based on 11 patients with epilepsy who underwent a corpus callosotomy
      • unique circumstances
      • lowers external validity
    • ❌ 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
    • πŸ“– 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
    • πŸ“– 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
      1. neuronal unmasking
      2. axonal sprouting
      3. reformation of blood vessels
      4. recruitment of homologous areas
    • πŸ’€ neural unmasking
      • brain contains dormant synapses
      • after damage, these become activated allowing for new neural pathways to form