Methods of studying the brain

    Cards (25)

    • the brain is the main focus of neuroscience
    • studying the brain gives important insights into underlying foundations of our behaviour and mental processes
    • a range of methods are used to study the brain including scanning the living brain to look at patterns of activity associated with particular tasks
    • methods of studying the brain
      • post mortem examinations
      • functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
      • electroencephalogram (EEG)
      • event related potentials (ERPs)
    • post mortem examinations are used to establish underlying neurobiology of particular behaviour observed when patient was living (looking at a dead persons brain)
    • an example of post mortem examinations includes Brocas area
    • using post mortem examinations as a method of studying the brain has led to identification of brain structures involved in memory such as HM was used to identify hippocampus
    • using post mortem examinations there has been established links between psychiatric disorders and brain abnormalities
    • functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) measures changes in blood flow in areas of the brain which indicates neural activity
      • active areas within the brain have increased demand in oxygen which leads to increased blood flow
      • whereby it then maps out areas of the brain involved within certain functions
    • the fMRI takes slices of the brain showing activated areas through magnetic and electrical fields
      • the lit up areas are those neurons being activates
    • electroencephalogram (EEG) measures electrical activity within the brain
      • using electrodes on scalp to detect small electrical charges resulting from activity in the brain
      • signals are mapped out over time to produce EEG
    • EEG data can be used to detect various brain disorders or diagnose those that influence brain activity (Alzheimers)
    • there are 4 basic patterns on an EEG
      1. alpha waves
      2. beta waves
      3. delta waves
      4. theta waves
    • when a person is awake alpha waves are recorded
    • when person is physiologically aroused there will be low amplitude and fast frequency beta waves found
    • as an individual falls asleep the alpha waves decrease and are replaced with lower frequency theta waves and the delta waves
    • in sleep the beta waves are found in REM sleep - this is where individuals eyes more rapidly back and forth
    • evaluation for using fMRI as method of studying the brain - STRENGTHS
      • non invasive and does not expose the brain to harmful radiation (PET scans do)
      • offers objective and reliable measure of psychological processes where verbal reports cannot be done
    • evaluation for using fmri as method of studying the brain - LIMITATION
      • no direct measure of neural activity because it measures the blood flow only
      • argued it overlooks networked nature of brain activity due to it focusing on only localised activity
      • does not measure communication - can be argued as essential or crucial for the brain to function
    • evaluation for EEG as method of studying brain - STRENGTH
      • provides recording in real time so accurately measures task or activity and brain activity associated with it
      • useful in clinical diagnosis as it can be used to diagnose epilepsy because normal EEG readings will suddenly change due to disturbed brain activity
    • evaluation for using EEG as method of studying brain - LIMITATION
      • cannot reveal deeper regions without implanting electrodes which can only be done to non humans due to ethical implications
      • can pick up neighbouring electrode activity making it harder to identify exact source - can be seen as unreliable
    • evaluation of using ERP as method of studying the brain - STRENGTH
      • continuous measure of processing in response to stimulus - determine how processing is affected by specific experimental manipulation
      • is able to measure processing of stimuli even in absence of behavioural response
    • evaluation of using ERP as method of studying the brain - LIMITATION
      • requires large number of trials to gain meaningful data
      • only sufficiently strong voltage changes generated across scalp are recordable
      • electrical activities occurring deep in brain are not able to be recorded - restricted
    • evaluation for using post mortem examinations as a method of studying the brain - STRENGTH
      • allows more detailed examination which is not possible through scanning techniques
    • evaluation for using post mortem examinations as way of studying the brain - LIMITATION
      • time and matter of death can impact the brain
      • length of time between death and mortem can also impact
      • retrospective because can only be done following persons death
      • may be limited individuals who give away their brain once dead for examination
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