Plasticity

Cards (12)

  • Brain Plasticity
    The brains tendency to change and adapt because of experience and learning
  • Maguire et al (2000)
    Aim
    • investigated brains of london taxi drivers and found significantly more grey matter on posterior hippocampi compared to control group
    Procedure
    • 16 london taxi drivers able to navigate without a map
    • Healthy men with a mean age 44 (14+ years experience)
    • Control group of 50 non taxi drivers
    • IV occurred naturally (Quasi experiment)
    • Matched pairs
    • MRI scans used
    Findings
    • The longer they were a taxi driver, the more pronounced the structural differences on right posterior hippocampi
    • positive correlation
  • Maguire et al (2000) strengths
    • Highly controlled procedure
    • MRI scans - scientific credibility
    • Highly replicable
    • Quasi - high internal validity
    • Explanatory power of research is high
    • Navigational ability can be learned
    • Extraneous variables were minimised through matched pairs
    • Animal research support
  • Maguire (2000) weaknesses
    • Ethnocentric sample
    • Highly skilled sample? Different cities?
    • Only UK based so lacks population validity
  • When does plasticity occur?
    • Boyke et al (2008) - learning a new skill
    • Maguire et al (2000) - having a skilled job
    • Kuhn et al (2014) - playing video games
    • Davidson et al (2004) - Meditation
  • Draganski et al (2006)
    • Imaged the brains of medical students before and after their final exams, found that learning induced changes were seen to have occurred in the posterior hippocampus and parietal cortex
  • Functional recovery

    A form of plasticity where the brains ability to redistribute or transfer functions due to damage through trauma
  • Synaptic pruning
    As we age, rarely used connections are deleted and frequently used connections are strengthened
  • Axonal sprouting
    Undamaged axons grow new nerve endings to reconnect neurons whose links were injured or severed
  • The recruitment of homologous areas

    Regions on opposite sides of the brain take on functions of damaged areas
  • Functional recovery medically:
    Stem cells can be
    • implanted directly to replaced a damaged or missing cell
    • implanted next to a damaged area so the growth factories they secrete can try to repair them
    • To create a pathway around the damage - rerouting the communication to an uninjured area which could takeover the function
  • Animal research support for plasticity
    Kepperman et al (1988)
    • Gave one group of rats complex and enriching houses, then the others had a standard lab cage
    • Rats with complex environment had larger hippocampi - supporting plasticity
    • Argued it was because of the need for memory and spatial navigation