* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Quiz scorers
Environmental enrichment wikipedia , lookup
Biochemistry of Alzheimer's disease wikipedia , lookup
Donald O. Hebb wikipedia , lookup
Activity-dependent plasticity wikipedia , lookup
Human brain wikipedia , lookup
Blood–brain barrier wikipedia , lookup
Neurophilosophy wikipedia , lookup
Time perception wikipedia , lookup
Neuroinformatics wikipedia , lookup
Selfish brain theory wikipedia , lookup
State-dependent memory wikipedia , lookup
Neuroesthetics wikipedia , lookup
Haemodynamic response wikipedia , lookup
Sports-related traumatic brain injury wikipedia , lookup
Prenatal memory wikipedia , lookup
Neurogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Neuroplasticity wikipedia , lookup
Aging brain wikipedia , lookup
Neurolinguistics wikipedia , lookup
Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup
Cognitive neuroscience wikipedia , lookup
Reconstructive memory wikipedia , lookup
Brain morphometry wikipedia , lookup
Memory consolidation wikipedia , lookup
Neurotechnology wikipedia , lookup
History of neuroimaging wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychology wikipedia , lookup
Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup
Limbic system wikipedia , lookup
Brain Rules wikipedia , lookup
Holonomic brain theory wikipedia , lookup
Psychopathology & Review - extra credit due the last day of class. I wont be there but turn it in to barbara or any one of the ta’s. 9.00 Intro Psych T.Konkle 9 May 2007 Agenda (1) turn back papers (2) shout outs (3) quiz (4) main points of the psychopathology lectures (5) some reconsolidation with the right intentions… shout outs Attendance: no absences for the course of the semester, not even excused ones. Quiz scorers: all quiz scores that were OVER 100 PERCENT, all scores that were 99%, excluding quizzes that happened on absent days Julia Alvarez Katherine Boothe Katherine Boothe Abraham Rosenfeld Tracey Liu Matthew Serna Trey Reyher Erica Young Abraham Rosenfeld Jennifer Sim Joseph Wallins Joseph Wallins Mariya Gusman Ken Warnock quiz Psychopathology the study of mental illness mood or affective disorders, anxiety disorders, psychotic disorders, eating disorders, developmental disorders, personality disorders, and many other categories The DSM has also been criticized for allegedly classifying behaviors that are simply unacceptable in the society of that time such as homosexuality (listed in the DSM until 1974).[23] Furthermore the potential of conflict of interest has also been questioned. Roughly 50% of the authors who previously defined psychiatric disorders have had or have relations with drug companies.[24] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagnostic_and_Statisti cal_Manual_of_Mental_Disorders Thinking about mental disorders Question: Is it right to think of these as disease? Why or why not? but… consider ‘female hysteria’ take diabetes: Diabetes results from lack of the hormone insulin, which is essential for the transfer of glucose from the blood to the tissues. Female hysteria was an incorrectly diagnosed medical condition in Western medicine that is not currently acknowledged by the medical community. It was a popular diagnosis in the Victorian era for a wide array of symptoms including faintness, nervousness, insomnia, fluid retention, heaviness in abdomen, muscle spasm, shortness of breath, irritability, loss of appetite for food or sex, and a "tendency to cause trouble" Water massages as a treatment for hysteria c. 1860 The profound reality: A prevalent view: well, if you can see a difference in the brain in people that have depression and people that are normal, then it depression must be a disease and not a social problem. “Whether it's society driving it or biological marker, the brain's going to show it! Who we are is in our brains. because there's a brain difference, it doesn't tell you if it's a top down social disease or a biological bottom up disease.” – J.G. Lets talk about treatment. TRUE or FALSE: you know if you’ve got the right diagnosis for a mental disorder if the person responds to treatment. False: Sometimes this is true. For example, neuroleptic drugs given to schizophrenics block DA receptors, which as lead to the dopamine theory of schizophrenia. But, in the case of ADHD, ritalin helps children with ADHD but also helps normal children (e.g. the false alarm task, from lecture). So, Schizophrenics are treated with neuroleptic drugs which keeps extra DA out of the system. Is this the same as giving insulin? Does this fix the problem of schizophrenia? No. Side effects of treating Schizophrenia are tardive diskensia. (or clozapine which risks liver and immune system) “no drug 'treats' a disease. they all 'manage' a disease. they all have side effects.” - J.G. More treatment We know that mental disorders have a biological basis, because minds come from brains. But, if these are mental disorders, can we treat them mentally? disorder what works best OCD therapy Depression Drugs and Therapy ADHD drugs question: when should you use a drug and when shouldn't you? in most cases it depends. any extreme position is not going to capture the reality present in the data. Question: How do we study the brain? … why? Answers: eeg lesions fmri stimulation single cell recording THE GOAL Hey ___, you took brain classes at MIT. How do they get these brain areas lighting up? What do you make of it? 9.00 Introduction to Psychology What do you see? … When you see it, KEEP IT TO YOURSELF! Talia Konkle 1 Mar 07 Basic Visual Pathway World Retina LGN V1 “What” “Where” W. W. Norton Receptive Field visual field Retinotopy neuron in V1 The visual system adjusts itself. • In time. • In space. • Why does it adjust? – sensitivity and gain? – neural fatigue? – adjustment of priors? (effects in the opposite direction) – Error correction? Simultaneous [blur] contrast (adjustment in space) Face adaptation (adjustment in time) Visual Themes - - our sense of the world is “constructed” from the input processing of the world is highly dependent on our visual experience Classical Conditioning US conditioning CS UR Operant Conditioning the process by which a behavior becomes associated with it’s consequences Shaping gradual process of reinforcing an organism for behavior that gets closer to the desired behavior Some of my examples What properties do you want a memory device to have? -it should RECORD what’s going on now. - it has to STORE the information - it can be accessed at a latter time… TERMINOLOGY: - encoding - storage - retrieval 100 ms - Processing a visual stimulus… Feel of the sand I remember that one time… beach Smell of the ocean In the NEOCORTEX Sight of the beach Priming what’s priming? give an example… dual coding - paivio Memory Implicit Repetition Priming Neocortex ~2-30 seconds: Processing a visual stimulus… Linking neocortex to hippocampus - HM with no hippocampus can’t do this. - necessary for the STORAGE of new memories In the HIPPOCAMPUS Explicit – “I remember I saw that beach” Memory Implicit Explicit Semantic Episodic Priming (with source memory) Hippocampus Neocortex 1-2 years: Processing a visual stimulus… -this is the state of the memory representation for ~ 2 years… - then, the memory is consolidated. no longer requires the hippocampus. In the Cortex Consolidated Long Term Memories Memory Implicit Explicit Semantic Episodic Priming (with source memory) Hippocampus Neocortex (pre consolidation) (post consolidation) Neocortex But there’s another pathway for memory… Memory put explicit memory off to the side Implicit Explicit Semantic Episodic Priming (with source memory) Hippocampus Neocortex (pre consolidation) (post consolidation) Neocortex Skills Learning A Skill -involves the motor system - requires repetition - often improves with sleep caudate In The Basal Ganglia (caudate nucleus) Skill learning - huntington’s, parkinsons Memory put explicit memory off to the side Implicit Explicit Semantic Episodic Priming Skills Neocortex Basal Ganglia (with source memory) Hippocampus Neocortex (pre consolidation) (post consolidation) Conditioned Responses Cerebellum What’s the difference between explicit and implicit? Between priming and Skills/Habits/ Conditioning? Memory Explicit Semantic Implicit Episodic Priming Skills Conditioned Responses (with source memory) Neocortex Hippocampus Basal Ganglia (pre consolidation) -something you get in ONE SHOT! Neocortex Cerebellum (post consolidation) - can happen with OR WITHOUT awareness! - requires Repetition - typically involves the motor system more ‘directely’ Sleep behavioral signatures neural signatures Language and Thought boroditsky lakoff Some of my Favorite Spatial Metaphors • GIVING A LECTURE – are you following me so far? – no, can you go back? – you’re kind of jumping around… – today we’re trying to cover a lot of ground. tomorrow, we’ll revisit some of the points • BEING IN LOVE – we’re going too fast – look how far we’ve come – we’re at a crossroads – we just have to go our separate ways – it’s been a long bumpy road – I don’t think this relationship is going anywhere • COMMUNICATING – it’s hard to get the idea across to him – I gave you the idea – your reasons came through to us – try to pack more meaning into fewer words – the idea is burried in terribly dense paragraphs Language and thought Representing the abstract in terms of the concrete The objects of planet Gazoob “tufa” “tufa” “tufa” Intelligence [defn] the ability to solve problems well and to understand and learn complex material spearman’s “g” a single intellectual capacity that underlies the positive correlations between many intelligence tests gardner’s multiple intelligences cattell and horn’s fluid & crystallized 8 forms of intelligence: linguistic, spatial, musical, logical bodily-kinesthetic, intrapersonal, interpersonal, naturalist, existential fluid – solutions to new problems crystallized – knowing facts and having the ability to combine them The Big Five • of all the ways to characterize personality, certain characteristics seem to come out again and again…and they are… Openness Conscientiousness (aka dependability) Extraversion Agreeableness Neuroticism (aka emotional stability) How do we find out what babies know? methods Methods Issues Preferential Looking - if you don’t see a preference, it doesn’t mean the baby can’t tell the difference between the stimuli. Habituation - do you expect a familiaritypreference or a novelty-preference? Violation of Expectation Eye Tracking ERP - you cant tell if they are preferring the view they saw earlier, or just have a preference for one of the stimuli - babies don’t sit still and they fuss - getting parent’s to do this to their kids? Theories of development Nativism • • Infants are born with rich knowledge of the structure of the world Core knowledge includes knowledge about events and objects Constructivism/ Empiricism • Infants are born into a “blooming, buzzing confusion” • Must discover the structure of the world by perceptual and motor experience Socio-economic theory • older people pay more attention to positive things, compared to young people. older people are happier by self report The aging brain: - what’s the dominant trend in how the brain works as you age? - is this evidence of compensation or decline? how do we know this? What can you take from all this? In the News Machine Means End To Sleepless Nights A new discovery could make it possible to take a "power nap" at the flick of a switch. Scientists have found a way to turn on deep sleep at will using a machine that magnetically stimulates the brain. Sweet dreams A device worn on the head could in squeeze the benefit of eight hours' sleep into just two or three hours. Scientists in the US used a technique called transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to induce slow waves - indicative of the deepest phase of sleep and essential for learning ability and mood, in a group of sleeping volunteers. A TMS device sends harmless magnetic signals through the scalp and skull and into the brain, where it activates electrical impulses. The researchers found that positioning the TMS machine the right way triggered slow waves that travelled throughout the brain. Slow wave activity occupies 80% of sleeping hours. During slow wave sleep, waves of electrical impulses wash across the brain at a rate of roughly one a second. With each magnetic pulse, the volunteers' brains immediately generated slow waves typical of deep sleep. "Creating slow waves on demand could some day lead to treatments for insomnia," said study leader Prof Giulio Tononi, from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "Theoretically, it could also lead to a magnetically stimulated `power nap' which might confer the benefit of eight hours' sleep in just a few hours.“ Prof Tononi believes sleep is essential to prevent the brain overloading. Memory involves strengthening synapses - connections between brain cells formed by learning. Sleep might allow the connections created during the day to relax at night, according to Prof Tononi. In the News… Keeping the brain in gear: Boomers eager to maintain cognitive fitness The Philadelphia Inquirer 05/10/2007 PHILADELPHIA — Gerry Stride cracks wise about having a senior moment when she forgets a name. But this baby boomer's fear of succumbing to dementia or Alzheimer's disease is no joke. That's why Stride, 57, is a regular at the new "brain gym" of the Medford Leas retirement campus in Medford, N.J., where she works as director of community life. The exercise room contains eight computers loaded with Posit Science's Brain Fitness Program, one of a growing number of software applications designed to stimulate the mind and, say its designers, possibly stave off mental decline. .. By 2030, the number of Americans with dementia is expected to more than double to 5.2 million, while those 65 and older with Alzheimer's is predicted to grow 50 percent, to 7.7 million. In April, UCLA hosted a one-day $500 boot camp aimed at affluent boomers after memory techniques, brain-healthy recipes and mind-building exercises. And the handheld Brain Games, which Small created, hit Sharper Image and other stores in January. For $19.99, the electronic device "cross-trains your brain," Small said. In the last decade, research has shown that the brain changes in response to stimulation, and that novel and complex learning adds neurons. Less certain is the connection between rousing cells and warding off mind-robbing diseases. http://www.montereyherald.com/health/ci_5861327 In the news… Psychiatrists, Children and Drug Industry’s Role When Anya Bailey developed an eating disorder after her 12th birthday, her mother took her to a psychiatrist at the University of Minnesota who prescribed a powerful antipsychotic drug called Risperdal. Skip to next paragraph Prescription for Influence Beyond the Label The New York Times Created for schizophrenia, Risperdal is not approved to treat eating disorders, but increased appetite is a common side effect and doctors may prescribe drugs as they see fit. Anya gained weight but within two years developed a crippling knot in her back. She now receives regular injections of Botox to unclench her back muscles. She often awakens crying in pain. Drug makers underwrite decision makers at every level of care. They pay doctors who prescribe and recommend drugs, teach about the underlying diseases, perform studies and write guidelines that other doctors often feel bound to follow. But studies present strong evidence that financial interests can affect decisions, often without people knowing it. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/health/10psyche.html?_r=1&oref=slogin In the news… Brain's White Matter More 'Talkative' Than Once Thought Article Date: 09 May 2007 - 23:00 PDT Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered to their surprise that nerves in the mammalian brain's white matter do more than just ferry information between different brain regions, but in fact process information the way gray matter cells do. The discovery in mouse cells, outlined in Nature Neuroscience, shows that brain cells "talk" with each other in more ways than previously thought. "We were surprised to see these nerve axons talking to other cells in the white matter," says Dwight Bergles, Ph.D., an associate professor of neuroscience at Hopkins. The discovery focuses on oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), whose main role when they mature into oligodendrocytes is to wrap themselves around and insulate nerves with a whitish coat of protective myelin. The immature cells simply hang around and divide very slowly, waiting to be spurred into action. To learn more about OPCs that reside in the brain's white matter, the Johns Hopkins researchers measured activity from individual precursor cells in the corpus callosum, a region of white matter that connects the two brain hemispheres. To their surprise, OPCs were found to have electrical signals produced by the neurotransmitter glutamate, similar to the signals used as the principle means of cell-to-cell communication and information processing in the gray matter. The phenomenon was unlikely, they said, because in the mouse brain, OPCs in the myelin-rich white matter are far from synapses, the points of contact between nerves where glutamate is released. THANK YOU!