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Teaching with the Brain-Based Natural Human Learning FACES
Teaching with the Brain-Based Natural Human Learning FACES

... stupid. With appropriate help she became an excellent reader. Only 5% of students have ADD, but more than 25% are given ritalin, which stifles normal brain growth. These students say they are so bored they can't sit still, be quiet, listen and obey; they want to think, figure things out themselves, ...
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... 31. Which of the following would contribute to the negative resting membrane potential of a neuron? (p 17) 32. Which of the following states is true regarding the resting membrane potential of a neuron? (45) 33. When the membrane potential becomes positive, this is called __________. (p 46) 34. Wha ...
Einstein`s Brain
Einstein`s Brain

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einsteins-brain

... Einstein’s Brain • Einstein died in 1955 at age 76. His brain was stored by Dr Thomas Harvey, pathologist, who performed the autopsy. Harvey cut the brain into 240 pieces, which he kept in jars at his house. Harvey moved around the country but he always brought the brain with him. He eventually sen ...
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... Mental life: thinking. Psychology is the science of mental life, both its phenomena and of their conditions ...
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An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology - Home

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... membrane potentials in a network of neurons connected with electrical synapses (gap junctions). It is considered by some theorists to be the neural correlate of consciousness. (Stufflebeam 2009) ...
Electrical Stimulation of the Brain
Electrical Stimulation of the Brain

... behind the action potential. This process continues as a chain-reaction along the axon. The influx of sodium depolarizes the axon, and the outflow of potassium repolarizes the axon. ...
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Chapter 2—Biological Bases of Behavior I. Neuroanatomy-

... 2. how a neuron fires (neuron has slightly negative charge in its resting state)  Neurotransmitters from Neuron A fit like  If enough are received (“threshold”), the cell membrane of Neuron B  This change in charge spreads down the length of Neuron B like  Neurons fire completely or not at all…c ...
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Neurotransmitters - Woodridge High School

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Why study brain-behavior relations?

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Study Concepts for Exam V - Nervous System

... Divisions of the CNS and PNS, and what parts serve what functions Types of reflex arcs The definitions and differences in location of nuclei vs. ganglia The parts of the brain at the level of detail discussed in lecture. Know at least one major function for each larger and more specific parts, such ...
Examples of the value of animal use in neuroscience from the FENS
Examples of the value of animal use in neuroscience from the FENS

... with patients. Many neuroscientists are actively involved in developing new methods and furthering existing techniques for studying the human brain. In some cases, however, the work can only be done with animals. Memory loss and difficulty finding one’s way are early warnings of impending Alz ...
BIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR
BIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR

... • Nerve cell which transmits electrical and chemical information (via neurotransmitters) throughout the body. Each nerve cell is separate from another and is called a Neuron – a string of these is a nerve cell. • Learning takes place by new dendrites actually sprouting to make connection with other ...
The Brain and Its Disorders
The Brain and Its Disorders

... The Blood-Brain Barrier • Endothelial cells in blood vessels in the brain fit closely together • Only some molecules can pass through • Protects the brain from foreign molecules and hormones and neurotransmitters from other parts of the body • Can be damaged by infections, head trauma, high blood p ...
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brain09.3

... 2009 – An interdisciplinary team of scientists at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has developed a new analytical tool to answer the question of how our brain cells record outside stimuli and react to them. Although much progress has been made in understanding the brain in recent decades, scientis ...
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... It is accountable for the treatments of memory, thought, and perception and serves like the seat of problem solving, language, social capabilities, and advanced motor function. Cells of the nervous system that transmit messages via electrochemical signs. It is a slim, normally branched projection of ...
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Donald O. Hebb

Donald Olding Hebb FRS (July 22, 1904 – August 20, 1985) was a Canadian psychologist who was influential in the area of neuropsychology, where he sought to understand how the function of neurons contributed to psychological processes such as learning. He is best known for his theory of Hebbian learning, which he introduced in his classic 1949 work The Organization of Behavior. He has been described as the father of neuropsychology and neural networks. A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Hebb as the 19th most cited psychologist of the 20th century. His views on learning described behavior and thought in terms of brain function, explaining cognitive processes in terms of connections between neuron assemblies.
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