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Chapter 5 Methods and Strategies of Research This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: • any public performance or display, including transmission of any image over a network; •preparation of any derivative work, including the extraction, in whole or in part, of any images; •any rental, lease, or lending of the program. 1 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Experimental Ablation Evaluating the Behavioral Effects of Brain Damage: Experimental ablation: • The removal or destruction of a portion of the brain of a laboratory animal; presumably, the functions that can no longer be performed are the ones the region previously controlled. Lesion study: • A synonym for experimental ablation. 2 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Experimental Ablation Producing Brain Lesions: Excitotoxic lesion: • A brain lesion produced by intracerebral injection of an excitatory amino acid, such as kainic acid. 6-hydroxydopamine (6-HD): • A chemical that is selectively taken up by axons and terminal buttons of noradrenergic or dopaminergic neurons and acts as a poison, damaging or killing them. 3 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Experimental Ablation Producing Brain Lesions: Sham lesion: • A “placebo” procedure that duplicates all of the steps of producing a brain lesion except for the one that actually causes the brain damage. 4 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Experimental Ablation Stereotaxic Surgery Stereotaxic Surgery: • Brain surgery using a stereotaxic apparatus to position an electrode or cannula in a specified position of the brain. Bregma: • The junction of the sagittal and coronal sutures of the skull, often used as a reference point for stereotaxic brain surgery. 5 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Experimental Ablation The Stereotaxic Atlas Stereotaxic atlas: • A collection of drawings of sections of the brain of a particular animal with measurements that provide coordinates for the stereotaxic surgery. Stereotaxic apparatus: • A device that permits a surgeon to position an electrode of cannula into a specific part of the brain. 6 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Histological Methods Fixation and Sectioning Fixative: • A chemical such as formalin; used to prepare and preserve body tissue. Formalin: • The aqueous solution of formaldehyde gas; the most commonly used tissue fixative. 7 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Histological Methods Fixation and Sectioning Perfusion: • The process by which an animal’s blood is replaced by a fluid such as a saline solution or a fixative in preparing the brain for histological examination. Microtome: • An instrument that produces very thin slices of body tissue. 13 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Tracing Neural Connections Tracing Efferent Axons Anterograde labeling method: • A histological method that labels the axons and terminal buttons of neurons whose cell bodies are located in a particular region. PHLA-L: • Phaseolus vulgaris leukoagglutinin; a protein derived from kidney beans and used as an anterograde tracer; taken up by dendrites and cell bodies and carried to the ends the axons. 14 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Tracing Neural Connections Tracing Efferent Axons Immunocytochemical method: • A histological method that uses radioactive antibodies or antibodies bound with a dye molecule to indicate the presence of particular proteins of peptides. 16 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Tracing Neural Connections Tracing Afferent Axons Retrograde labeling method: • A histological method that labels cell bodies that give rise to the terminal buttons that form synapses with cells in a particular region. Fluorogold: • A dye that serves as a retrograde label; taken up by the terminal buttons and carried back to the cell bodies. 17 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Study of the Living Human Brain Computerized tomography (CT): • The use of a device that employed a computer to analyze data obtained by a scanning beam of Xrays to produce a two dimensional picture of a slice through the body. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): • A technique whereby the interior of the body can be accurately imaged; involves the interaction between radio waves and a strong magnetic field. 19 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Recording and Stimulating Neural Activity Recording Neural Activity Microelectrode: • A very fine electrode, generally used to record activity of individual neurons. Single unit recording: • Recording of the electrical activity of a single neuron. 21 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Recording and Stimulating Neural Activity Recording with Macroelectrodes Macroelectrode: • An electrode used to record the electrical activity of large numbers of neurons in a particular region of the brain; much larger than a microelectrode. Electroencephalogram (EEG): • An electrical brain potential recorded by placing electrodes on or in the scalp. 22 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Recording the Brain’s Metabolic and Synaptic Activity 2-deoxytglucose (2-DG): • A sugar that enters cells along with glucose but is not metabolized. Autoradiography: • A procedure that locates radioactive substances in a slice of tissue; the radiation exposes a photographic emulsion or a piece of film that covers the tissue. 25 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Recording the Brain’s Metabolic and Synaptic Activity Fos: • A protein produced in the nucleus of a neuron in response to synaptic stimulation. Positron emission tomography (PET): • A device that reveals the localization of a radioactive tracer in a living brain. Functional MRI (fMRI): • A modification of the MRI procedure that permits the measurement of regional metabolism in the brain. 26 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Measuring the Brain’s Secretions Measuring the Brain’s Secretions Microdialysis: • A procedure for analyzing chemicals present in the interstitial fluid through a small piece of tubing made of a semipermeable membrane that is implanted in the brain. 28 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Stimulating Neural Activity Multibarreled micropipette: • A group of micropipettes attached together, used to infuse several different substance by means of iontophoresis while recording from a single neuron. Microiontophroesis: • A procedure that uses electricity to inject a chemical from a micropipette to determine the effects of the chemical on the electrical activity of a cell. 30 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Neurochemical Methods Finding Neurons that Produce Particular Neurochemicals In situ hybridization: • The production of DNA complementary to a particular messenger RNA to detect the presence of the RNA. 33 Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon Copyright © 2004 Allyn and Bacon