The Brain and Neuropsychology

    Cards (31)

    • Autonomic Nervous System Functions

      Moods and feelings, responds to threats, involved in puberty ect
    • Somatic Nervous System Functions
      Collects external and internal information and receives instructions from the central nervous system
    • Peripheral Nervous System
      • Somatic nervous system
      • Autonomic nervous system
    • Central Nervous System
      Coordinates incoming information, makes decisions about movement/other activities, thinking and memory
    • Fight or flight response

      physiological reaction that occurs when in the presence of something mentally or physically terrifying.
    • Neuron
      Information processing units of the brain
    • Sensory neuron function(s)
      Processes information taken from the senses to the brain
    • Motor neuron function(s)

      Stimulates muscles and carries signals from the CNS to effectors eg. glands
    • Relay neuron function(s)

      Carries messages from one part of the CNS to another
    • Excitation
      Electrical activity elicited in a nerve or muscle when stimulated
    • Inhibition
      conscious or unconscious constraint or curtailment of a process or behaviour
    • Neurotransmitter
      chemical messengers that facilitate communication between neurons in the brain and nervous system
    • Synapse
      How neurons communicate with each other
    • Synaptic transmission
      The process by which one neuron communicates with another across a synapse
    • Frontal lobe function(s)

      • Controls; thought, memory, planning, problem solving, cognitive and social behaviours and movements (eg. facial expressions)
      • Often affected by traumatic brain injuries
    • Parietal lobe function(s)
      • Responsible for integrating information from other areas to form the basis of complex behaviours, including all involving the senses
      • Language, forming words and thought
    • Temporal lobe function(s)
      • Helps us understand and process what we hear
      • Involved in how we learn and organise information
      • Emotions and emotional memories
    • Occipital lobe function(s)
      • Where visual information is processed
      • Injury to this area can cause vision imparements
    • Cerebellum function(s)
      • Balance and coordination
      • As we become more practical in physical skills (eg.walking)bthe cerebellum makes these actions smoother
    • Localized function
      Specific parts of the cerebral cortex are specialized for particular types of cognitive and behavioural processes
    • Motor area
      • Controls deliberate movement using motor neurons to send messages to our muscles
      • Active parts of the body (eg. fingers) have a larger share of the motor cortex than less active parts (eg. torso)
    • Somatosensory area
      • Deals with touch
      • The more sensitive an area of the body is, the larger the amount of somatosensory cortex it involves
    • Visual cortex
      • In the occipital lobe
      • Receives information from both eyes through the optic nerve
    • Auditory (and language) cortex
      • Does the same as the visual cortex
      • Damage to this part of the brain could cause hearing loss
    • Broca's area
      • At the base of the left frontal lobe
      • Deals with speech production
      • Damage to this area can cause you to struggle with speech
    • Wernicke's area
      • In the temporal lobe
      • Understanding speech
      • People with damage to his area can speak, but have trouble understanding what others say
    • Angular gyrus
      • Back of the parietal lobe
      • Recieves information about written language from the visual cortex, and interprets it like speech
    • CT Scans
      • Work similarly to X-Rays
      • The brain is examined by taking a large number of X-Rays
      • Images taken from different angles (either slice through, or cross section off the persons brain)
      • Images put together to create detailed picture
    • PET Scans
      • Measure metabolic activity within the brain (which parts are more active)
      • Person injected with a small amount of glucose, called radiotracer (most active areas of the brain absorb more of it)
      • This information is sent to a computer, the active areas appear as different colours (red and yellow areas are more active than blue areas
    • fMRI Scans
      • Work similarly to PET scans
      • Measure changes in blood oxygen levels in the brain
      • When a brain area is active, it uses more oxygen so more blood is directed to the area, this is called the haemodynamic response
      • Picked up through radio signals which produce 3D images on a computer screen
    • Neurological damage
      Damage to the nervous system
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