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Describe the parts of the brain activated in the following situation
Describe the parts of the brain activated in the following situation

... Involved in the formation of memories of what to paint, and how to set perspective, as well as memories of mixing colors and painting techniques The cerebral cortex will oversee will oversee all aspects of the artist’s behavior. Sensory projection areas in the occipital, temporal, parietal lobes wil ...
Basic Brain Structure and Function
Basic Brain Structure and Function

... division of labor • Right hemisphere controls left side of body and visual field • Left hemisphere controls right side of body and visual field ...
Chapter 12 Central Nervous System – Brain
Chapter 12 Central Nervous System – Brain

... Delta waves < 4 Hz deep sleep, abnormal if awake consciousness ...
The Senses
The Senses

... The Evolving Eye • Eye cups provide information about light intensity and direction, but no image formed • 2 major types of image forming eyes have evolved ▫ Compound eye: light-detecting units called ommatidia  Each has its own light focusing lens and photoreceptors  Acute motion detectors and c ...
28.1_Responses
28.1_Responses

... Sequence What is the correct sequence of the following in response to a stimuli: interneuron, motor neuron, sensory neuron, muscle Review What are two general ways in which nervous systems differ among animal groups Review Give an example of an animal with a very simple sensory system and an example ...
Test 5 Study Guide
Test 5 Study Guide

... The general senses describe our sensitivity to temperature, touch, pressure, vibration, pain and proprioception. The involve receptors that are relatively simple in structure and distributed throughout the body. The special senses include hearing, smell, taste, vision and balance (equilibrium). Thes ...
Mind, Brain & Behavior
Mind, Brain & Behavior

... Amygdala – coordinates emotion, autonomic and endocrine systems via hypothalamus. ...
SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY
SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY

... BIPOLAR cells can be either EXCITED or INHIBITED by photoreceptors − light turns them either OFF or ON (via disfacilitation or disinhibition) − graded potentials only ...
GLOSSARY of Occupational Therapy Terminology
GLOSSARY of Occupational Therapy Terminology

... Self-regulation: Nervous system’s ability to attain, maintain, and change levels of arousal or alertness. Sensory Diet: A term devised by Patricia Wilbarger in 1971 to describe a therapeutic method to maintain an optimal level of arousal (in the nervous system) by offering the right combination of s ...
The effect of visual experience on the development of the mirror
The effect of visual experience on the development of the mirror

... Visual perception and visual imagery share common cortical regions within the parietal lobes. The extrastriate cortex of the dorsal pathway for spatial localization can process stimuli independently from the sensory modality that conveys the information to the brain and thus appears to be organized ...
Bio 111 Lab 8: The Nervous System and the Senses
Bio 111 Lab 8: The Nervous System and the Senses

... recognize and express emotions. If you are right handed you are left brain-dominant. The two sides communicate information through the corpus collosum. The corpus collosum is a critical bridge: the right brain allows you to recognize your best friend in a crowd, and the left brain allows you to say ...
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception

... from the bathroom and plunked myself down in the wrong booth, facing the wrong man. I remained unaware he was not my date even as my date (a stranger to me) accosted Wrong Booth Guy, and then stormed out of the Station. I can’t distinguish actors in movies and on TV. I do not recognize myself in pho ...
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What is resting membrane potential, how is it created and maintained?

... Explain transmission of a nerve signal across a synapse ...
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Ch 13 - lanoue

... The “Dropper” – hold ruler vertical and drop it between your partner’s thumb and index finger. The distance the ruler falls before he/she stops it with his thumb and finger indicates their reaction time. Repeat twice. Record the results. Challenge: Try the experiment again while the catcher recites ...
Sensory Motor Approaches with People with Mental Illness Week 5
Sensory Motor Approaches with People with Mental Illness Week 5

... – Defective proprioceptive feedback mechanisms and under-reactive vestibular systems • Patient use sensory input effectively to determine position in ...
General Senses Complete
General Senses Complete

... Are large and complex compared to the general sense receptors Exteroceptors: classification of sensory receptors React to stimuli in the external environment Usually found close to the body surface Example: receptors in the skin, vision apparatus of the eye, receptors in the ear Interoceptors (visce ...
SNC 2D
SNC 2D

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Dorsal Column * Medial Lemniscal System (DC-ML)
Dorsal Column * Medial Lemniscal System (DC-ML)

... of parts of the body in space) 2. Precise touch, 3. Vibration sense, 4. Pressure sensation. 5. Two-point discrimination. ...
FIGURE LEGENDS FIGURE 22.1 An example of a figure that can
FIGURE LEGENDS FIGURE 22.1 An example of a figure that can

... location and for wavelength. Receptive field 1 is excited by turning on red light (R) at its center and is inhibited by turning on green light (G) in its surround. Receptive field 2 is less common and is antagonistic for wavelength (blue vs. yellow) without being antagonistic for the location of the ...
Sensation2011
Sensation2011

... Specialized neurons that are activated by stimulation and transduce (convert) it into a nerve impulse Sensory pathway – Bundles of neurons that carry information from the sense organs to the brain ...
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Central Nervous System (CNS)

... • His only hope of survival and brain development involved early surgery to sever the connections between the right and left hemispheres of the brain ...
Percept
Percept

... The brain senses the world indirectly because the sense organs convert stimulation into the language of the nervous system: neural impulses. ...
The Central Nervous System
The Central Nervous System

... Consists of : 1. Brain 2. Spinal Cord a. b. c. ...
SENSORY INNERVATION OF HEAD
SENSORY INNERVATION OF HEAD

... eye Test: Two point discrimination and touch to lower lip and jaw Ear ache in Bell's palsy from VII sensory Anesthesia, pain with cervical nerve damage ...
Diencephalon - People Server at UNCW
Diencephalon - People Server at UNCW

... includes three main symptoms: simultanagnosia (the inability to see more than one object at a time); optic ataxia (the fixation of gaze with severe problems in voluntarily moving fixation); and optic apraxia (the inability to reach towards the correct location of perceived objects)78 ...
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Sensory substitution

Sensory substitution means to transform the characteristics of one sensory modality into stimuli of another sensory modality. It is hoped that sensory substitution systems can help people by restoring their ability to perceive a certain defective sensory modality by using sensory information from a functioning sensory modality. A sensory substitution system consists of three parts: a sensor, a coupling system, and a stimulator. The sensor records stimuli and gives them to a coupling system which interprets these signals and transmits them to a stimulator. In case the sensor obtains signals of a kind not originally available to the bearer it is a case of sensory augmentation. Sensory substitution concerns human perception and the plasticity of the human brain; and therefore, allows us to study these aspects of neuroscience more through neuroimaging.
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