Psychology Chapter 3: Biopsychology
Parasympathetic Division
Acts to calm the body after an emergency situation has engaged the sympathetic division; provides a means for the body to maintain storage of energy sources
Sympathetic Division
Acts to prepare the body in stressful emergency situations, mobilizing resources to respond to a threat
Amygdala
BRAIN: Damage to this area can result in usually docile and tame animals into belligerent savages
Cerebellum
BRAIN: Damage: Instability and unsteadiness in movement. Inability to walk a straight line without staggering and lurching forwards
Hippocampus
BRAIN: Damage: Results in difficulty in learning and remembering new information
Corpus Callosum
BRAIN: Damage: delayed social skills, learning processes, and are sensitive to certain sensory cues. A patient might have trouble with coordinating their hands, preventing them from matching sensations on one hand with movement on the other, because the information doesn't get to where it's needed.
Corpus Callosum
BRAIN: Function: Bridge of fibers passing information between the two cerebral hemispheres - divides it into two hemispheres - transferring motor, sensory, and cognitive info from left and right hemispheres
Cerebellum
BRAIN: Function: Controls bodily balance
Amygdala
BRAIN: Function: Controls fear and aggression
Hippocampus
BRAIN: Function: Learning and Memory
hypothalamus
BRAIN: Function: Maintain a steady internal environment for the body - responsible for regulating basic biological needs: hunger, thirst, temperature control
Thalamus
BRAIN: Function: Relay information about the sense, relay center for cortex, handles incoming and outcoming signals
Medulla Oblongata
BRAIN: Function: Responsible for regulating largely unconscious functions such as breathing and circulation
Cerebral Cortex
BRAIN: Function: The "new brain" responsible for the most sophisticated information processing in the brain; contains four lobes: Think, evaluate, make complex judgements
Medulla Oblongata
BRAIN: Location:
Cerebral Cortex
BRAIN: Location: Above everything
Corpus Callosum
BRAIN: Location: Below Cerebral Cortex
Thalamus
BRAIN: Location: In the middle of the central core
Cerebellum
BRAIN: Location: Just above the medulla and behind the pons
hypothalamus
BRAIN: Location: Just below the thalamus
Amygdala
BRAIN: Location: Small end of the limbic system a series of doughnut shaped structure
Hippocampus
BRAIN: Location: part of the limbic system the doughnut shaped structure
Central nervous system
Consists of brain and spinal cord
Nervous System
Consists of the brain the neurons extending throughout the body.
Frontal Lobes
Function: MOTOR AREA: body's voluntary movement BORCA'S AREA: speech Location: Lie in the center of the cortex
Pariental Lobe
Function: SOMATOSENSORY AREA: sensations of touch and pressure on skin SOMATOSENSORY ASSOCIATION AREA: permits you to determine the exact shape and texture of an object by feeling it Location: Behind frontal lobes
Temporal Lobe
Function: WERNICKE'S AREA: understand spoken language PRIMARY AUDITORY AREA: hearing AUDITORY ASSOCIATION AREA: Allows you to recognize a particular sound as speech, music or noise Location: Occupy lower center position
Occipital Lobe
Function: stimulation by electrodes produces the experiences of flashes of light or colors, suggestive that the raw sensory input from the eyes is received in this area of the brain and transformed into meaningful images VISUAL AREA: sight VISUAL ASSOCIATION AREA: allows one to recognize visually Location: Behind temporal lobe
Dopamine
NEUROTRANSMITTER: LOCATION: Brain EFFECT: Inhibitory or excitatory FUNCTION: Movement control, pleasure and reward, attention
Acetylcholine
NEUROTRANSMITTER: LOCATION: Brain, Spinal cord, peripheral nervous system, especially some organs of the parasympathetic nervous system EFFECT: Excitatory in brain and autonomic system; inhibitory elsewhere FUNCTION: muscle movement, cognitive functioning
Glutamate
NEUROTRANSMITTER: LOCATION: Brain, spinal cord EFFECT: Excitatory FUNCTION: Memory
Serotonin
NEUROTRANSMITTER: LOCATION: Brain, spinal cord EFFECT: Inhibitory FUNCTION: Sleeping, eating, mood, pain, depression
Gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA)
NEUROTRANSMITTER: LOCATION: Brain, spinal cord EFFECT: Main inhibitory neurotransmitter FUNCTION: Eating, aggression, sleeping
Endorphins
NEUROTRANSMITTER: LOCATION: Brain, spinal cord EFFECT: Primarily inhibitory, except in hippocampus FUNCTION: Pain suppression, pleasurable feelings, appetites, placebos
Peripheral Nervous System
Nervous system that includes the autonomic and somatic subdivisions: Made up of long axons and dendrites, it contains all parts of the nervous system other than the brain and spinal cord and reaches extremities of the body
Transcranial magnetic stimulation imagine (TMS)
Newest brain-scannning technique. Exposing a region of the brain to a strong magnetic field, it disrupts electrical activity. One can note the effect on normal brain functioning. Identifies areas of the brain that are responsible for particular functions - useful treatment for depression an schizophrenia.
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
Scans provide detailed, three-dimensional computer-generated images of brain structures and activity by aiming a powerful magnetic field at the body. Vivid, detailed images of the functioning of the brain. Used in planning brain surgeries because they can help distinguish areas of the brain involved in normal and disturbed functioning.
Position Emission Tomography (PET)
Shows biochemical activity within the brain at a given moment. Begin with an injection of radioactive liquid into the bloodstream, which carries into the brain. Computer pinpoints more active regions, providing a picture of the brain at work. Used to search for brain tumors in people with memory problems.
terminal buttons
small bulges at the end of axons that send messages to other neurons
axon
the part of the neuron that carries messages destined for other neurons
synapse
the space between two neurons where the axon of a sending neuron communicates with the dendrites of a receiving neuron by using chemical messages
Somatic Division
Specializes in the control of voluntary movements and the communication of information to and from the sense organs
dendrite
a cluster of fibers at one end of a neuron that recieves messages form other neurons
myelin sheath
a protective coating of fat and protein that wraps around an axon
action potential
an electric nerve impulse that travels through a neuron's axon when it is set off by a "trigger" changing the neuron's charge from negative to positive
Spinal cord
bundle of neurons that leaves the brain and runs down the length of the back and is the main means for transmitting messages between the brain and the body
neurotransmitters
chemicals that carry messages across the synapse to dendrite (and sometimes the cell body) of a receiving neuron
Autonomic Division
concerned with the parts of the body that function involuntarily without our awareness
neurons
nerve cells, the basic elements of the nervous system
Brain
An organ roughly half the size of a loaf of bread that constantly controls behavior
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
Records electrical activity in the brain through electrodes placed on the head. Electrical activity into a pictorial representation of the brain that allows more precise diagnosis of such disorders as epilepsy and learning disabilities
