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Psych Paper 2
Biopsychology
Plasticity and functional recovery
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Created by
Laura Cratchley
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Cards (22)
What does plasticity refer to in the context of the brain?
Neurological
changes due to
learning
and
experience
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How has recent research changed the understanding of brain plasticity?
Mature brains
continue to show
plasticity
as a result of
learning
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What analogy is used to describe the process of practicing a skill in relation to brain plasticity?
It is like taking your brain to the
gym
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What happens to the relevant part of the brain when a skill is practiced?
It gets
stronger
and may
change
shape
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What occurs to neural pathways that are not used often?
They become
weak
and eventually
die
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What are the key points about the plasticity of the brain?
Plasticity involves
neurological
changes due to
learning.
Mature
brains show plasticity from
learning
experiences.
Practicing
skills strengthens relevant
brain areas
.
Unused
neural pathways
weaken
and can
die.
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What evidence supports the theory of brain plasticity?
Maguire et al's
study
comparing taxi drivers and non-taxi drivers
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What did Maguire et al find about the hippocampus of taxi drivers?
Taxi
drivers
had a larger
posterior
hippocampus
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What does the difference in hippocampus size suggest about taxi drivers?
It suggests that their
brains
developed
differently
due to
spatial navigation experiences
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What is a limitation of Maguire's study on brain plasticity?
It had a limited sample of only
16
taxi
drivers
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Why is it difficult to generalize the findings of Maguire's study?
Because of the small
sample size
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What is functional recovery in the brain?
It refers to brain functions moving from a
damaged
site to an
undamaged
site.
Observed in
stroke victims
who lost brain functions.
The brain can
re-wire
itself to recover lost functions.
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How do neurons contribute to functional recovery after brain damage?
Neurons
next to
damaged
sites can
take
over
lost functions
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What are dormant synapses in the context of functional recovery?
Neural
connections that have no
function
until
activated
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What happens to dormant synapses after brain damage?
They can become
activated
to
take
over
lost functions
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What are the strengths and limitations of functional recovery?
Strengths:
Leads to applications in
neurorehabilitation
.
Example:
constraint-induced movement therapy
.
Limitations:
Individual differences
affect recovery
extent
.
Age
,
gender
, and
education
influence recovery.
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What is an example of a neurorehabilitation technique related to functional recovery?
Constraint-induced movement therapy
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How does age affect functional recovery after brain trauma?
Younger
individuals are
more
likely to recover than
older
individuals
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What did Marquez find regarding age and recovery from brain trauma?
Older
patients regained less
function
than
younger
patients
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How does gender influence functional recovery from brain injury?
Women
tend to recover better due to less
lateralization
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What did Schneider find about education and recovery from brain injury?
More time spent in
education
increases chances of a
disability-free
recovery
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What factors influence the extent of functional recovery?
Age
: Younger individuals recover better.
Gender
: Women recover better due to less
lateralization
.
Education
: More education leads to better recovery outcomes.
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