ways of studying the brain L8

Cards (28)

  • What are event-related potentials (ERPs)?
    ERPs are very small voltage changes triggered by specific stimuli.
  • Why might a researcher look for abnormalities in a patient post-mortem?
    To investigate behavioral changes suspected to be caused by brain damage.
  • Who observed patients' speech difficulties related to brain lesions?
    Brock
  • When do sensory ERPs occur after a stimulus is presented?
    Sensory ERPs occur in the first 100 milliseconds after the stimulus.
  • What do cognitive ERPs demonstrate?
    Cognitive ERPs are generated later and demonstrate information processing.
  • What significant brain damage was confirmed in Henry Molaison's post-mortem examination?
    Damage to his hippocampus related to his inability to store new memories.
  • Why are ERPs difficult to identify?
    ERPs are difficult to pick out from all the other electrical activity in the brain.
  • What is required to establish a specific response to a target stimulus?
    Many presentations of the stimulus are needed, and the responses are averaged together.
  • What happens to extraneous neural activity when averaging ERP responses?
    Extraneous neural activity that is not related to the specific stimulus will not occur consistently.
  • What does fMRI stand for?
    Functional magnetic resonance imaging.
  • What does fMRI measure?
    fMRI measures changes in blood oxygenation and flow, indicating increased neural activity.
  • Why is fMRI considered a non-invasive way of scanning the brain?
    Because it does not expose patients to harmful radiation.
  • How does fMRI provide a more objective measure of psychological processes?
    It offers a more reliable measure than verbal reports.
  • What do electroencephalograms (EEGs) measure?
    EEGs measure electrical activity in the brain via electrodes placed on the scalp.
  • What do EEGs show over time?
    EEGs show brainwaves and patterns of electrical activity in the brain.
  • Why is EEG useful in clinical diagnosis?
    EEG is useful in diagnosing epilepsy as it shows spikes of electrical activity during seizures.
  • What do Alzheimer's patients often show in EEG readings?
    Alzheimer's patients often show overall slowing of electrical activity.
  • What is one strength of the EEG technique?
    EEG provides a recording of the brain's activity in real time.
  • What are the four basic EEG patterns?
    The four basic EEG patterns are alpha waves, beta waves, delta waves, and theta waves.
  • What type of brain activity is recorded when a person is awake but relaxed?
    Rhythmical alpha waves are recorded.
  • What limitation does EEG have regarding brain region activity?
    EEG can only detect activity in superficial brain regions.
  • Which deeper brain regions cannot be revealed by EEG?
    EEG cannot reveal activity in deeper regions such as the hypothalamus or hippocampus.
  • fMRI


  • Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. A type of neuroimaging technique.

  • The amount of oxygen in the blood.
  • Blood Flow

  • Blood Oxygenation

  • Neural Activity