Neuropsychology

Cards (12)

  • Cognitive neuroscience

    Field that combines cognitive psychology and neuroscience, investigating the relationship between brain structure/function and behaviour/cognition
  • 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
  • Historical way of studying brain function

    Investigating abnormal people and their brains, to infer the function of damaged brain regions
  • 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")
  • Problems with using abnormal brains to study brain function include small sample sizes and unusual cases
  • 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)
  • 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
  • Classic PET scan study on long-term memory

    • Tulving injected radioactive tracer, found episodic and semantic memories use different brain regions
  • Limitations of Tulving's PET scan study include small sample size, potential researcher bias, and difficulty of the memory tasks
  • Neurological damage

    Damage or destruction of brain neurons, leading to loss of function
  • Causes of neurological damage

    • Strokes (blood vessel burst or clot)
    • Physical damage (impact, disease effects)
  • Effects of neurological damage

    • Paralysis (motor cortex damage)
    • Behaviour changes (frontal lobe, limbic system damage)