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Nervous System
Nervous System

... Located between the cerebral hemispheres and above the midbrain Composed largely of gray matter Thalamus within the diencephalon relays sensory impulses from other parts of the nervous system to the cerebral cortex Hypothalamus lies below the thalamus and maintains homeostasis by regulating a variet ...
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Brain_stemCh45

... Acute transection rostral to inferior colliculus result in coma (unarousability) ...
Module 3 - Victor Valley College
Module 3 - Victor Valley College

... guided into a predetermined location in the brain ...
Optogenetic Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (ofMRI
Optogenetic Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (ofMRI

... the same location. After allowing animal recovery time and opsin expression time, the animal was scanned using a 7T small animal. Animals were intubated with the tracheal tube connected to a ventilator with 1.3-1.5% isoflurane, 35% O2, 65% N2O input gas, and a capnometer. Animal body temperature and ...
LECTURE OUTLINE
LECTURE OUTLINE

... The spinal cord and the brain make up the central nervous system (CNS). The Spinal Cord The spinal cord extends from the base of the brain through a large opening in the skull and into the vertebral canal. Structure of the Spinal Cord The spinal nerves project from the cord between the vertebrae. Fl ...
Chapter 7 The Nervous System Chapter Objectives Anatomy and
Chapter 7 The Nervous System Chapter Objectives Anatomy and

... The most common procedures used to diagnose problems of the nervous system involve the use of sound and dyes to create graphic pictures. The advances in technology have allowed for two very specific procedures to be developed: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) uses a combination of radio waves and a ...
Brightness and Lightness
Brightness and Lightness

... All objects appear to maintain their familiar lightness when the lighting condition changes. ...
The Brain
The Brain

... The primary neurotransmitter used by neurons carrying messages form the CNS  Involved in some kinds of learning and memory ...
The Biological Perspective - Virgil Zeigler-Hill
The Biological Perspective - Virgil Zeigler-Hill

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Abnormality - Beauchamp College
Abnormality - Beauchamp College

... • Explains behaviour by what DRIVES it, eg; the way a person thinks, feels, or acts. • Freud said illness is more about psychological (emotional, spiritual, inner) rather than the physical factors. • Most behaviour can be expressed by the unconscious. ‘Freudian slip’. Conflicts between the ID and eg ...
brain
brain

... the epithalamus, thalamus, and hypothalamus • The epithalamus includes the pineal gland and generates cerebrospinal fluid from blood • The thalamus is the main input center for sensory information to the cerebrum and the main output center for motor information leaving the cerebrum • The hypothalamu ...
Major lobes - Ohio University
Major lobes - Ohio University

... On a top of thalami are two hippocampi – one on each side.  Hippocampus plays important role in transferring experienced information to long term memory and retrieving episodic memory.  It is also involved in spatial navigation. ...
Music and the Brain: Areas and Networks
Music and the Brain: Areas and Networks

... Understanding areas and networks Inferring structure and function in the human brain is a science that dates back centuries. Renaissance scholars such as Leonardo Da Vinci believed that the soul was contained in the ventricles of the brain, whereas in the 1600s Descartes believed that the soul was c ...
PsychSim 5: PSYCHOLOGY`S TIMELINE
PsychSim 5: PSYCHOLOGY`S TIMELINE

... researcher who is recording from “mirror neurons” in the premotor cortex of monkeys as they perform various tasks or watch others perform those tasks. Brain Regions  Briefly describe the premotor cortex of the brain, including its location and function. ...
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... – Increases heart rate, blood pressure, and blood sugar for a surge of energy: the fightor-flight response ...
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Class 1 notes

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Brain Anatomy
Brain Anatomy

... The rod pierced through his frontal lobe and exited out the top of his skull. Remarkably enough, he survived because none of the vital parts that control breathing, movement or physical control had been damaged. However, other major changes were noticed as a result of the accident. Gage, a usually f ...
Biological Bases of Human Behavior
Biological Bases of Human Behavior

... explain and use the Nernst equation to construct a working model of the resting membrane potential bringing into play the forces of osmosis, electrostatic pressure and the sodium/potassium pump. Then explaining and using voltage clamp technology, show how actions potential can be generated and move ...
Right vestibular nucleus
Right vestibular nucleus

... amplitude of sound into only a hundred-fold range - enables the ear to encode an enormously broad range of sound intensities). – Otoacoustic emissions - in a very quiet environment, a normal human cochlea can produce spontaneous otoacoustic emissions, which are tones, and an epiphenomena (like feedb ...
The impact of brain science on education
The impact of brain science on education

... relation to maths is in its relative infancy. We do know that infants are born with a sense of numbers and by the age of three are demonstrating this by the way they point, count in order, use their fingers and link simple numbers to quantities. The research suggests that the government is on the ri ...
Chapter 40
Chapter 40

... Sensitization results in an increase response after experiencing an unpleasant stimulus. ...
Nervous system - Effingham County Schools
Nervous system - Effingham County Schools

... • Axon - sends messages away from soma • Dendrite - receives messages from axon to soma. Types of Neurons: • Afferent (sensory) - to spinal cord or brain • Efferent (motor) - away from spinal cord or brain • Interneurons (synapse between 1 and 2) - from afferent to efferent (from sensory to motor) ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... or impulses around the body. Inside each nerve is a bundle of nerve fibers. Some nerves are really long, like the ones that go all the way from your feet to your spinal cord. Nerve cells are called neurons.  There are two main types of nerves: motor nerves and sensory ...
Kein Folientitel - Institut für Grundlagen der Informationsverarbeitung
Kein Folientitel - Institut für Grundlagen der Informationsverarbeitung

... • Inclusion of results, models, and problems of cognitive neuroscience (memory, top-level-control) • Discussion of work in related EU-research projects (in which students could become involved) ...
Chapter 49 Worksheet: Nervous Systems The Evolution and
Chapter 49 Worksheet: Nervous Systems The Evolution and

... 11. Describe our current understanding of the human consciousness. Recent years have seen increased study of consciousness using brain-imaging techniques such as fMRI and PET scans, making it possible to compare activity in the human brain during different states of consciousness. Support is growin ...
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History of neuroimaging

The first neuroimaging technique ever is the so-called ‘human circulation balance’ invented by Angelo Mosso in the 1880s and able to non-invasively measure the redistribution of blood during emotional and intellectual activity.Then, in the early 1900s, a technique called pneumoencephalography was set. This process involved draining the cerebrospinal fluid from around the brain and replacing it with air, altering the relative density of the brain and its surroundings, to cause it to show up better on an x-ray, and it was considered to be incredibly unsafe for patients (Beaumont 8). A form of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) were developed in the 1970s and 1980s. The new MRI and CT technologies were considerably less harmful and are explained in greater detail below. Next came SPECT and PET scans, which allowed scientists to map brain function because, unlike MRI and CT, these scans could create more than just static images of the brain's structure. Learning from MRI, PET and SPECT scanning, scientists were able to develop functional MRI (fMRI) with abilities that opened the door to direct observation of cognitive activities.
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