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Neuropsychology
Neuropsychology
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Maja
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Cards (12)
Cognitive
neuroscience
Field that combines
cognitive
psychology and
neuroscience
, investigating the relationship between brain structure/function and behaviour/cognition
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Cognitive
neuroscientists
Explain how the
structure
and function of the brain is related to our behaviour and
cognition
Identify the
location
of functions in the brain
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Historical
way of studying brain function
Investigating abnormal people and their brains, to infer the
function
of
damaged
brain regions
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Famous
examples of abnormal brain function
Phineas Gage
(frontal lobe damage, aggressive personality)
Clive Wearing
(hippocampus damage, unable to form new memories)
Tan
(temporal lobe damage, could only say "tan")
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Problems with using
abnormal brains
to study brain
function
include small sample sizes and unusual cases
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Modern
brain scanning techniques
CT
scans (use x-rays to show brain structure)
PET
scans (use radioactive tracers to show brain activity)
fMRI
scans (use magnetic fields to show brain activity)
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Advantages
and disadvantages of brain scanning techniques
CT scans: high detail,
cheaper
, but
radiation
risk
PET scans: show
brain
activity, but limited scans due to
radiation
fMRI
scans: show
brain
activity, no radiation, but poor temporal resolution
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Classic
PET scan study on long-term memory
Tulving injected
radioactive
tracer, found episodic and semantic memories use different
brain
regions
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Limitations of
Tulving's PET
scan study include small sample size, potential researcher bias, and difficulty of the
memory
tasks
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Neurological
damage
Damage or destruction of brain neurons, leading to loss of
function
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Causes
of neurological damage
Strokes
(
blood vessel burst
or clot)
Physical damage
(impact,
disease effects
)
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Effects
of neurological damage
Paralysis
(motor cortex damage)
Behaviour
changes (frontal lobe, limbic system damage)
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