Cards (12)

    • Gopnik et al (1999) found that during infancy the brain experiences a rapid growth in the number of synaptic connections that it has
    • Growth of synaptic connections peak at about 15,000 per neuron at 2-3 years of age, this is twice as many as there are in the adult brain
    • As we age synaptic pruning occurs where rarely used connections are deleted and frequently used connections are strengthened
    • Synaptic pruning enables lifelong plasticity
    • Draganski et al. (2006)
      • studied medical students 3 months before and after their final exams
      • learning induced changes were seen to have occurred in the posterior hippocampus and parietal cortex
    • Maguire et al. (2000)
      • looked at brains of London taxi drivers through MRI scans
      • found significantly more volume of grey matter in the posterior hippocampus than a matched control group
      • this part of the brain is associated with the development of spatial and navigational skills
    • Maguire et al. (2000)
      • London taxi drivers learning experience of recalling city streets and routes for a complex test they have to take altered the structure of their brains
      • the longer the taxi drivers were on the job the more pronounced the structural difference was, representing a positive correlation
    • Tramotin and Brenowitz (2000)
      • seasonal changes in response to the environmental changes
      • e.g. SCN on the sleep/wake cycle
      • evidence that SCN shrinks in all animals during spring and expands in autumn
      • BUT much of the work on seasonal plasticity is done on animals specifically songbirds
      • human behaviour may be controlled differently
    • One limitation of brain plasticity is that it may have negative behavioural consequences. The brain's ability to adapt to damage is not always beneficial.
    • Negative plasticity research - Medina et al. (2007)
      • brain's adaptation to prolonged drug use leads to poorer cognitive functioning in later life and increases risk of dementia
    • Negative plasticity research - Ramachandran and Hirstein (1998)
      • 60-80% of amputees develop phantom limb syndrome - the continued experience of sensations in missing limb as if still there
      • sensations are unpleasant and painful
      • thought to be due to cortical reorganisation in the somatosensory cortex that occurs as a result of limb loss
    • Plasticity
      This describes the brain's tendency to change and adapt as a result of experience and new learning. This generally involves the growth of new connections.