PSY 437 Exam 1
central fissure
the fissure that separates the frontal lobe from the parietal lobe
Ghrelin
a hunger hormone that tells the brain you are hungry
myelencephalon
medulla
factors contributing to uneven distribution
membrane is selectively permeable, sodium-potassium pumps
midbrain
mesencephalon
reticular formation
plays a part in sleep, arousal, movement, and various vital resources
what is the mV needed to generate an action potential?
-60mV
PET scan
shows structures growth or diminishings
central canal
ventricle that runs the length of the spinal cord
neurons resting potential
-70mV, negative inside compared to outside, polarized
olfactory, optic, oculomotor, trochlear, trigeminal, abducens, facial, vestibulocochlear, glossopharyngeal, vagus, accessory, hypoglossal
12 cranial nerves
what cranial nerves do not go through the spinal cord?
3,4,6
how are proteins moved from rough er to smooth er
Golgi, which packs the proteins into vesicles
postsynaptic hyperpolarizations
Inhibitory PSPs (less likely for neuron to fire)
Korsakoff's syndrome
a condition characterized by severe memory loss and most commonly seen in alcoholics
gyrus
a convolution of the cortex of the cerebral hemisphere
calcarine fissure
a fissure located ini the occipital lobe on the medial surface
microtubule
a long strand of bundles of protein filaments arranged around a hollow core
major fissure
a major groove ini the surface of the brain
What is Korsakoff's syndrome the result of?
a thiamine deficiency, butt the damage is accelerated by alcohol
pia mater
adheres to the CNS surface
dorsal horn
afferent, sensory, info coming into CNS
axoplasmic transport
an active process by which substances are propelled along microtubules that run the length of the axon
Jimmie G
an alcoholic with Korsakoff's
macroglia
astrocytes (BBB), ependymal cells (line ventricle walls and move CSF), oligodendrocytes, Schwann cells
CNS
brain and spinal cord
PNS
brings information into the CNS and carries signals out of the CNS, regulation of internal environment of the body
what gives the brain its blood supply?
carotid arteries, vertebral arteries,
basal ganglia includes
caudate nucleus, globus pallidus, putamen, sub thalamic nucleus, nucleus accumbent
Mesencephalon
cerebral aqueduct, tectum and teqmentum
what is the forebrain covered by?
cerebral cortex
multipolar neuron
cerebral cortex, cerebellum, spinal cord
hyperpolarization
channels close slowly, K+ efflux leads to membrane potential greater than -70mV
blood-brain barrier
chemical protection of the brain, tightly-packed cells of blood vessel calls prevent the entry of many molecules
repolarization
concentration gradient and change in charge leads to efflux of K+
autonomic nervous system
consists of the parasympathetic and sympathetic
periaqueductal gray matter
contains neural circuits involved in sensitivity to pain as well as the behaviors of fighting and ****ing
hypothalamus
controls the autonomic nervous system, controls anterior and posterior pituitary glands, 4 fs (fighting, ****ing, feeding, fleeing)
parasympathetic nervous system
craniosacral, "rest and restore", long pre-ganglionic, short post-ganglionic
what causes Parkinson's disease?
degeneration of the caudate nucleus and putamen
what structures does a signal go through?
dendrites, cell body, axon hillock, axon (myelin, nodes of ranvier), terminal buttons, synapses
what is the main difference between human and nonhuman subjects?
differences are more qualitative than quantitative
interneurons
don't really send info out, get info make tweaks and sends it right out right there, doesn't have long axon because message doesn't go far
ventral horn
efferent, motor, info going out to PNS
what covers the CNS?
encased in bone and 3 meninges
postsynaptic depolarizations
excitatory PSPs (make it more likely for a neuron to fire)
homogenizing
factor influencing ion distribution, diffusion and electrostatic pressure
lateral fissure
fissure that separates the temporal lobe from the overlying frontal and parietal lobes
Case study
focus on a single individual
metencephalon
fourth ventricle, cerebellum and pons
astrocyte
glial cell that provides support to neurons of the CNS, provided nutrients and other substances, and regulates the chemical composition of extracellular fluid
sulcus
groove in the surface of the cerebral hemisphere, smaller than fissure
pons
important to sleep and arousal
absolute refractory period
impossible to initiate another AP
frontal lobe
includes everything in front of the central fissure
medulla
includes nuclei that control vital functions such as the cardiovascular system, respiration, and skeletal muscle tone
what does the tectum (roof) consist of?
inferior (auditory) and superior (visual) colliculi
spatial summation
integration of events happening at different places
temporal summation
integration of events happening at different times
microglia
involved in response too injury or disease
corpus callosum
large bundle of axons that interconnects corresponding regions of the association cortex on each side of the brain
telencephalon
lateral ventricles, cerebral cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, basal ganglia
unipolar neuron
located near spinal cord with processes extending to skin, muscles, organs, and glands
primary somatosensory cortex
located on post central gyrus, anterior parietal lobe
white matter
mainly myelinated axons
hindbrain
metencephalon and myelencephalon
Microscopic research methods of B neuro
microtome, stains, electron microscopy
end of rising phase
na channels close, change in membrane potential opens voltage-gated K+ channels
rising phase
na moves membrane potential from -60mV to 40mV
substantia nigra
neurons that communicate with the caudate nucleus and putamen, part of the basal ganglia (darkly stained region)
cerebellar peduncle
one of the three bundles of axons that attach to each cerebellar hemisphere to the dorsal pons
What does the tegmentum (covering) contain?
periaqueductal gray matter, reticular formation, red nucleus, and substantia nigra
motor association cortex
premotor cortex, controls overall motor behavior
gray matter
primarily cell bodies
cerebral cortices
primary visual cortex
CT scan
produces 3d images
dendrites
receive signals from adjacent neurons
red nucleus
receives inputs from the cerebellum and motor cortex and sends axons to motor neurons in the spinal cord
what are the three Rs of animal research?
reduce, replace, refine
primary motor cortex
region of posterior frontal lobe that contains neurons that control movements of skeletal muscle, precentral gyrus
primary auditory cortex
region of the superior temporal lobe whose primary input from auditory
somatic nervous system
regulates the nervous systems interaction with the environment (afferent-sensory, efferent-motor)
bipolar neuron
retina, cochlea, olfactory bulb, tongue
anterograde
soma to terminal button
what are the 2 components of the PNS?
somatic and autonomic
multiple neurons fire at the same time?
spatial
Lesion
stereotaxic surgery, injury to neural tissue, naturally occurring
microfilament
structural filaments that change throughout learning and brain changes due to experience
neurofilaments
structural support
ablation
surgical removal of neural tissue
forebrain
telencephalon and diencephalon
one neuron fires rapidly?
temporal
several neurons fire repeatedly?
temporal and spatial
retrograde
terminal button to soma
projection fiber
thalamus, an axon of a neuron in one region of the brain whose terminals form synapses with neurons in another region
diencephalon
third ventricle, thalamus and hypothalamus
sympathetic nervous system
thoracolumbar, "fight or flight", short pre-ganglionic, long post-ganglionic
dura mater
tough outer membrane
circle of willis
vertebral arteries give rise to a basilar artery, which joins the carotid arteries at the base of the brain to form the circle of willis
arachnoid mater
weblike, contains subarachnoid space