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Transcript
Brain & Behavior
1
Goals for Lecture & Readings
• Understand the mechanisms of
neural communication
• Understand the form and function of
the nervous system
2
Phineas Gage
• 1848
• Railway worker
• Tamping iron blew
through his head
• Memory and movement
intact, could learn new
things
• But, personality changed
3
Phineas Gage
• 1980s
• Computer modelling
shows path of rod
• Damaged ventromedial
frontal lobe
• Brain region linked to
personality
4
“Biopsychology”
• Biological approach to the study of
psychology
• Various approaches to understand
links between nervous system and
behavior
5
Characteristics of Biopsychology
• Humans & nonhumans subjects
• Experiments and case studies
• Basic and applied research
6
Divisions of Biopsychology
1. Physiological Psychology
•
Manipulate nervous system (surgery,
chemicals); theories of neural control of
behavior
2. Psychopharmacology
•
Effects of drugs on neural activity and
behavior
3. Neuropsychology
•
Study behavioral deficits produced by brain
damage; often applied
7
Divisions of Biopsychology
4. Psychophysiology
•
Record physiological responses to
understand relation between physiology and
psychology
5. Comparative Psychology
•
Behavior of different species; focus on
genetics, evolution, function
8
Building Blocks of Nervous
System
• Neurons
• Specialized nerve cells
• Send/receive nerve impulses
• Sensory, motor, interneurons
• Neurons have a right-hand man, called
glial cells
• hold neurons in place and provide
nutrients
• Outnumber neurons 10:1
9
Neurons
• Three basic parts:
• Cell body (soma)
• Metabolic centre, genetic material,
etc…
• Dendrites
• Specialized fibres for receiving info
• Axon
• Conducts messages away from cell
body
10
Also, Node of Ranvier
Terminal buttons
11
Neurons
• Neuron fires when stimulated
– Heat
– Light
– Pressure
– Other neurons
• The impulse is called an action potential
12
Electrical Activity of a Resting
Neuron
• Membrane Potential:
• Difference in electrical charge between
inside and outside of cell
• Resting Potential:
• -70 mV
• Lots of Na(+) ions outside cell
• Lots of protein(-) molecules inside cell
13
When a Neuron is
Stimulated…
• Stimulation causes
distribution of
particles to change
• Na(+) flows in
• Attracted to
protein(-)
• Inside now (+)
relative to outside
14
Neural Conduction
• Action Potential:
• Massive, brief reversal of membrane
potential from –70 to +50 mV
• After an action potential, neuron has to
recharge, so to speak
• K(+) pumped out of cell, (-) charge
restored
• Refractory period – neuron cannot fire
again during this process
15
Myelinated Axons
• Myelin is fatty tissue
• Faster conduction
• Action potential
“jump” from one Node
of Ranvier to the next
• Multiple Sclerosis –
myelin sheath
destroyed
16
From One Neuron to the
Next
• Synapse:
• The site of adjacent neurons
• “Synapse” - Greek word for “gap”
• (Every mall in Athens has a store called
“The Synapse”)
• Action potentials at terminal buttons
cause release of chemical
neurotransmitters
• Neurotransmitters bind to sites on
adjacent neurons and thereby induce
electrochemical changes in them
17
18
Neurotransmitters
• When they bind to an adjacent
neuron, they cause chemical
reactions
• Excitatory neurotransmitters
• Cause Na(+) to enter cell
• Makes action potential more likely
• Makes it more likely the cell will
send signals to other neurons
19
Neurotransmitters
• Inhibitory neurotransmitters
• May cause K(+) to leave the cell, or
Chloride(-) to enter
• This makes an action potential less
likely
• makes it less likely the cell will
send signals to other neurons
20
Some Neurotransmitters
• Acetylcholine
• Excitatory at synapses involved in
memory and movements
• Dopamine
• Excitatory; movement, emotional
arousal
21
Effects of Drugs
• Drugs affect behavior and thought by
influencing the activity of neurons
• Agonists
• Mimic a particular neurotransmitter
• Increase activity of neurotransmitter
• Antagonists
• Inhibits activity of a neurotransmitter
22
Effects of Drugs
• Nicotine is an agonist for Dopamine
• Reward and pleasure
• Amphetamines and Cocaine:
agonists for Dopamine and
Norepinephrine
• Reward, pleasure, arousal
23
24
Major Divisions of Nervous
System
• Central Nervous System
(CNS):
• Brain
• Spinal cord
• Peripheral Nervous
System (PNS):
• Somatic Nervous System
• Autonomic Nervous
System
25
Peripheral Nervous System
• Somatic Nervous System:
• Interacts with external environment
• Sensory info from receptors (in
skin, joints, eyes, ears, etc.) to CNS
• Signals sent back from CNS to
skeletal muscles
• Deals largely with voluntary
actions
26
Peripheral Nervous System
• Autonomic Nervous System:
• Involved in regulation of internal
environment
• Deals largely with involuntary functions
• Signals from organs to CNS
• Signals from CNS to organs
• Sympathetic nerves
• Prepare for action
• Parasympathetic nerves
• Conserve energy
27
Central Nervous System
• Spinal Cord
• Highway for most nerves
• H-shaped core of gray matter
• Cell bodies, unmyelinated
interneurons
• Surrounding white matter
• Ascending & descending myelinated
axons
28
The Brain
29
The Brain
30
One More Brain Diagram
31
EEG
Measures electrical activity
32
CAT Scan
Computerized Axial
Tomography
33
PET Scan
Positron Emission
Tomography
34
MRI
Magnetic Resonance
Imaging
35
The Brain, Function & Form
• Brainstem
• Medulla:
• Tracts that carry signals between
brain and rest of body
• Reticular formation:
• Involved in sleep, attention,
movement, and various autonomic
functions
36
The Brain, Function & Form
• Cerebellum
• “Little brain”
• Walking
• Balance
• Timing and coordination of
movements
37
The Brain, Function & Form
• Thalamus
• Sensory relay station
• Info from sensory receptors processed
and sent to sensory cortex
• Basal Ganglia
• Surrounds thalamus
• Deliberate movements
• Parkinson’s disease
38
The Brain, Function & Form
• Limbic System
• Hippocampus
• memory
• Amygdala
• emotion
• Hypothalamus
• Motivation; biological drives
39
The Brain
• Cerebral Cortex:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Outermost layer of brain
Wrinkled
Many connections to other areas
Frontal cortex complex cognition
Temporal  auditory, language
Occipital  visual
Parietal  sensory stuff
40
41