Brain and Behavior Movement Pain Perception

¡Supera tus tareas y exámenes ahora con Quizwiz!

68. ______ are critical for proprioception.

A) Muscle spindles B) Golgi tendon organs C) Joint receptors D) All of the answers are correct.

99. The inability to accurately complete a plan of motor action is called:

C) apraxia.

24. On the motor homunculus:

C) areas of precise motor control are given a larger representation.

2. The ______ controls the force of a movement, whereas the ______ controls the timing and accuracy of the movement.

C) basal ganglia; cerebellum

9. The primary motor cortex is responsible for:

C) producing specific movements.

87. Pain in blood vessels and internal organs that is felt as pain at the body surface is known as:

C) referred pain.

97. Research has demonstrated that tickle perception is primarily due to:

C) the unpredictability of the touch sensations.

53. Parkinson's disease can be treated by:

D) by either lesioning or stimulating the globus pallidus internal.

28. The sensory and motor cortices are:

D) continuously modified with learning and experience.

38. ______ muscles move the limb away from the trunk, whereas ______ muscles move the limb back toward the trunk.

A) Extensor; flexor

64. ______ skin is much more richly endowed with receptors and is exquisitely more sensitive to a wider range of stimuli than ______ skin.

A) Glabrous; hairy

74. Which of the following receptors are rapidly adapting receptors?.

A) Meissner corpuscles B) Pacinian corpuscles C) Ruffini corpuscles D) All of these are rapidly accepting receptors

58. ______ are the primary output cells of the cerebellum.

A) Purkinje cells

89. Action potentials in the semicircular canals are stimulated by:

A) bending hair cells.

91. Vestibular receptors convey information about:

A) changes in the direction of movement. B) changes in the speed of movement. C) the position of one's body in relation to gravity. D) All of the answers are correct.

55. The flocculus of the cerebellum is involved with:

A) control of balance and eye movements.

27. Early research on the motor cortex suggested that it ______; however, more recent work suggests that the motor cortex may actually ______.

A) controlled individual muscle movements; store a repertoire of movement categories

20. The spinal cord functions in:

A) conveying sensory and motor information between the brain and body. B) reflexive behaviors. C) walking. D) All of the answers are correct.

77. The haptic and proprioceptive axons form the:

A) dorsal spinothalamic tract.

54. Cellular recordings from the globus pallidus internal in patients with Parkinson's disease show:

A) excessive activity.

71. Hapsis is the perception of:

A) fine touch.

40. Which of the following is not a part of the basal ganglia?

A) flocculus

3. Which part of the brain is responsible for planning and initiating movements?

A) frontal lobe

46. If cells of the caudate putamen are damaged, which one of the following motor disorders will be observed?

A) hypokinetic behavior

62. The motor system sends a copy of the "instructions" for a movement to the cerebellum via the:

A) inferior olive.

90. Hair cells in the vestibular system fire more action potentials when the hair:

A) is bent in a specific direction.

32. The ______ controls limbs and digits, whereas the ______ controls mainly trunk muscles.

A) lateral corticospinal tract; ventral corticospinal tract

82. When a physician taps the patellar tendon with a hammer, it causes a knee jerk reflex by sending stretch signals to:

A) motor neurons in the spinal cord that cause muscles to contract.

44. The neurotransmitter system that is most important for basal ganglia function is the:

A) nigrostriatal dopamine system.

73. The three major classes of sensory receptors are:

A) nociception, hapsis, proprioception.

7. The prefrontal cortex is responsible for:

A) planning movements.

30. Motor cortex is activated when a person:

A) plans a movement. B) imagines making a movement. C) executes a movement. D) All of the answers are correct.

14. Mirror neurons are found in the:

A) premotor cortex. B) parietal cortex. C) cerebellum. D) All of the answers are correct.

93. The homunculus on the primary somatosensory cortex is most similar to the homunculus found in the:

A) primary motor cortex.

4. The ventral side of the spinal cord ______, whereas the dorsal portion ______.

A) relays motor signals; relays sensory signals

29. Neurons in the primary motor cortex:

A) start to discharge just prior to a movement. B) discharge during a movement. C) increase their rate of firing if a weight is added to the movement apparatus. D) All of the answers are correct.

60. The cerebellum's role in motor behavior is primarily involved with:

A) timing of movements and maintaining movement accuracy.

81. Unilateral damage to the spinal cord will result in the loss of ______ on the same side of the body and loss of ______ on the opposite side of the body below the site of the damage.

A) touch and proprioception; pain and temperature

1. An example of a brain-computer interface (BCI) would be:

A) using only your thoughts to control a computer keyboard.

80. Both the dorsal and ventral spinothalamic tracts send their signals to the ______ nucleus of the thalamus.

A) ventrolateral

50. _____ are commonly used as a treatment for Tourette's syndrome.

B) Antipsychotics

75. Which of the following receptors are slowly adapting receptors?

B) Merkel receptors

67. Vibration is detected by:

B) Merkel receptors.

16. Locked-in syndrome can occur following damage to the:

B) brainstem.

45. Damage to the ______ results in ______.

B) caudate nucleus; Huntington's disease

52. The globus pallidus is an internal component of the basal ganglia that is involved with:

B) determining whether a movement will be weak or strong.

47. In the basal ganglia, excitation is to ______ as inhibition is to ______.

B) direct pathway; indirect pathway

78. Information from the ______ crosses to the other side of the brain in the brainstem, whereas the ______ crosses to the other side of the brain in the spinal cord.

B) dorsal spinothalamic tract; ventral spinothalamic tract

76. Somatosensory information is carried from the body to the CNS by the:

B) dorsal-root ganglion neurons.

66. Which of the following receptors is most responsive to pain and temperature?

B) free nerve endings

51. Brain imaging studies have noted decreased connectivity between ______ in patients with Tourette's syndrome.

B) frontal cortex and parietal cortex

65. The ability to discriminate the distance between two points on the skin is most sensitive in:

B) glabrous skin.

84. According to the gate theory of pain transmission, activity in the ______ can inhibit the pain pathway in the spinal cord.

B) hepatic-proprioceptive pathway

100. The dorsal stream is the ______ stream, while the ventral stream is the ______ stream.

B) how; what

96. Damage to the primary somatosensory motor cortex results in:

B) impaired sensory discrimination on the contralateral side.

56. The lateral parts of the cerebellar hemispheres control:

B) movement of limbs and digits.

35. The limb regions of the motor homunculus are involved in activating motor neurons that move the arms, hands, and legs primarily on the ______, and the trunk regions of the motor homunculus are mainly involved in activating motor neurons that move the trunk primarily on the ______.

B) opposite side of the body; same side of the body

12. Coordinating multiple simultaneous movements to accomplish a goal is a function of the:

B) premotor cortex.

18. Damage to level C1-C2 of the spinal cord would likely result in:

B) quadriplegia.

95. Neurons in area 3b of the primary somatosensory cortex are responsive to:

B) slow-responding skin receptors.

42. Which of the following is not part of the direct pathway of the basal ganglia?

B) the globus pallidus external.

72. Proprioception is the perception of:

B) the location of one's body in space.

43. Which of the following structures is not part of the indirect pathway in the basal ganglia?

B) the putamen.

79. Axons that carry information about pain and temperature form the:

B) ventral spinothalamic tract.

85. The gate theory of pain can help explain:

B) why rubbing an injury can reduce pain.

21. The first direct evidence that the cortex controls movement was provided by:

C) Gustav Fritsch and Eduard Hitzig.

23. A homunculus is:

C) a representation of the body in sensory and motor cortex.

17. Damage to the brainstem can result in:

C) both locked-in syndrome and cerebral palsy.

5. The arms are controlled by motor neurons in ______ levels of the spinal cord, whereas the legs are controlled by motor neurons in ______ levels of the spinal cord.

C) cervical; lumbar

31. The major motor pathway that relays signals from the primary motor cortex to the spinal cord is the:

C) corticospinal tract.

61. If a patient with cerebellar damage is asked to throw darts while wearing a pair of glasses that shift the vision to the right, the patient will most likely:

C) fail to show any adaptation to compensate for the visual shift.

94. How many homunculi are present in the primary somatosensory cortex, according to the Kaas model?

C) four

98. In a study by Pons and colleagues, monkeys' arm nerves were cut, thereby depriving the somatosensory cortex of sensory input from the arm. Several years later, when the researchers mapped the monkeys' somatosensory homunculus, they discovered that the arm region of the homunculus:

C) had been taken over by the face region.

26. Which of the following sequences is in the correct order from largest to smallest representation in the motor homunculus?

C) hands, lips, feet

19. Injury to level L1-L2 of the spinal cord would likely result in:

C) hemiplegia.

13. Neurons that fire when we execute a movement and when we observe another person making the same movement are referred to as:

C) mirror neurons.

63. To which of the following systems is the somatosensory system most closely linked?

C) motor

37. What constitutes the "final common path"?

C) motor neurons

69. Nociception is the perception of:

C) pain.

86. Stimulation of the ______ is effective in reducing pain.

C) periaqueductal gray matter

92. The primary somatosensory cortex is found in the ______, while the secondary somatosensory cortex is located in the ______.

C) postcentral gyrus; parietal lobe

10. In a person performing a sequence of finger movements, cerebral blood flow increases in the:

C) premotor cortex.

11. The decision to set your alarm an hour early so as not to be late for your exam would be made in the:

C) premotor cortex.

70. Pacinian corpuscles are most responsive to:

C) pressure and flutter stimuli.

15. Walter Hess's experiments reveal that one of the functions of the brainstem is to:

C) produce species-typical behavior.

8. The premotor cortex is responsible for:

C) producing movement sequences.

57. The cerebellum consists of _____ distinct layer(s).

C) three

36. Neurons in the ventral corticospinal tract in the left hemisphere control ______ muscles on ______ of the body

C) trunk; both sides

83. Research has demonstrated that phantom limb pain can be alleviated through the use of:

C) using a mirror to fool the sensory system into perceiving the missing limb.

6. Signals from motor cortex to the spinal cord are transmitted via cortical layer(s):

D) 5 to 6

41. Which region(s) of the cortex project to the basal ganglia?

D) All areas of the cortex project to the basal ganglia.

25. The person most credited with mapping the human motor cortex was:

D) Wilder Penfield.

59. A tumor or damage to the midline of the cerebellum seriously disrupts:

D) balance, eye movements, and upright posture.

48. The ______ contributes to motor control by adjusting the forces associated with movements, while the ______ compares the intended movement with actual movement for the improvement of movement skill.

D) basal ganglia; cerebellum

33. Neurons from the corticospinal tract synapse with:

D) both motor neurons and interneurons.

49. Which of the following is not associated with Tourette's syndrome?

D) hypokinetic symptoms.

34. In the spinal cord, laterally located motor neurons project to the ______, whereas more medially located motor neurons project to the ______.

D) limbs and digits; trunk and shoulders

88. The vestibular system is in the:

D) middle ear.

39. In all animals, a large proportion of the motor cortex is represented by:

D) muscles over which an animal has skilled and intricate control.

22. Wilder Penfield identified a motor homunculus in the:

D) primary motor cortex and the premotor cortex.


Conjuntos de estudio relacionados

Psyc 357 Exam 3 on Chapters 7 and 8

View Set

MI Life Insurance Policy Provisions, Options and Riders

View Set

Ch 7 Risk Monitoring and Control

View Set