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Advanced Placement Psychology

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Title: Advanced Placement Psychology


1
Advanced Placement Psychology
  • Module 4
  • The Brain

2
Genetic Instructions
  • Your brain develops from the instructions that
    are received at conception.
  • At fertilization, the egg and sperm each contain
    23 chromosomes
  • Zygote A cell that results when the egg is
    fertilized. It contains 46 chromosomes arranged
    in 23 pairs.

3
Genetic Instructions
  • Chromosomes A hairlike strand that contains
    tightly coiled strands of the chemical DNA
    (Deoxyribonucleic) acid. Each contain 46
    chromosomes, except the sperm and egg.
  • Chemical Alphabet Each chromosome is made up of
    long strands of DNA, which resembles a twisted
    ladder. Each rung of the DNA is made up of 4
    chemicals.

4
Genetic Instructions
  • Genes and Proteins A specific segment on the
    long strand of DNA that contains instructions for
    making proteins. Proteins are chemical building
    blocks from which all the parts of the brain and
    body are constructed.

5
Genetic Instructions
  • Fragile X syndrome A defect in the X chromosome.
    It can result in physical changes, such as a
    relatively large head with protruding ears, as
    well as mild to profound retardation.

6
The Brain
  • Lesion
  • tissue destruction
  • a brain lesion is a naturally or experimentally
    caused destruction of brain tissue

7
The Brain
  • Looking at the gray area of the brain, imagine
    that the person the brain belongs to is still in
    there.
  • Without electrochemical activity, there could be
    nothing of the human there.
  • What if someone removed the brain right before
    death and kept it alive. Would the person still
    be there?
  • Further, if it was transplanted in a person with
    severe brain damage, whose home does the
    recovered patient return?

8
The Brain
  • Because we can imagine this, it illustrates how
    we live in our heads.
  • The brain enables the mind seeing, hearing,
    remembering, thinking, feeling, speaking,
    dreaming.
  • It is the brain that self-reflectively analyzes
    the brain.
  • When were thinking about our brain, were
    thinking with our brainby firing millions of
    synapses and releasing billions of
    neurotransmitter molecules.
  • The mind is what the brain does.

9
The Brain
  • How do we explore where and how the minds
    functions are tied to the brain?

10
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
  • an amplified recording of the waves of electrical
    activity that sweep across the brains surface
  • these waves are measured by electrodes placed on
    the scalp

11
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
An electroencephalograph providing amplified
tracings of waves of electrical activity in the
brain. Here it is detecting brain response to
sound, making possible an early evaluation of
what may be a hearing impairment.
12
PET Scan
To obtain a PET scan, researchers inject
volunteers with a low and harmless dose of a
short-lived radioactive sugar. Detectors around
the subjects head pick up the release of gamma
rays from the sugar, which has concentrated in
active brain areas. A computer then processes
and translates these signals into a map of the
brain at work.
13
MRI Scan
MRI scan of a healthy individual (left) and a
person with schizophrenia (right). Note the
enlarged fluid filled brain region in the image
on the right
14
The Brain
  • CT (computed tomography) Scan
  • a series of x-ray photographs taken from
    different angles and combined by computer into a
    composite representation of a slice through the
    body also called CAT scan

15
The Brain
PET (positron emission tomography) Scan a visual
display of brain activity that detects where a
radioactive form of glucose goes while the brain
performs a given task
16
The Brain
MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) a technique
that uses magnetic fields and radio waves to
produce computer-generated images that
distinguish among different types of soft tissue
allows us to see structures within the brain
17
The Brain
  • Brainstem
  • the oldest part and central core of the brain,
    beginning where the spinal cord swells as it
    enters the skull
  • responsible for automatic survival functions
  • Medulla muh-DUL-uh
  • base of the brainstem
  • controls heartbeat and breathing

18
The Brain
19
The Brain(Midbrain)
  • Reticular Formation
  • a nerve network in the brainstem that plays an
    important role in controlling arousal
  • Thalamus THAL-uh-muss
  • the brains sensory switchboard, located on top
    of the brainstem
  • it directs messages to the sensory receiving
    areas in the cortex and transmits replies to the
    cerebellum and medulla

20
The Brain (Hindbrain)
  • Cerebellum sehr-uh-BELL-um
  • the little brain attached to the rear of the
    brainstem
  • it helps coordinate voluntary movement and balance

21
The Medulla (Hindbrain)
Located at the top of the spinal chord, includes
a group of cells that control vital reflexes,
such as respiration, heart rate, and blood
pressure.
22
The Hindbrain
  • Pons
  • Functions as a bridge to interconnect messages
    between the spinal cord and brain. The pons also
    makes chemicals involved in sleep.

23
The Brain(Midbrain)
  • Limbic System
  • a doughnut-shaped system of neural structures at
    the border of the brainstem and cerebral
    hemispheres
  • associated with emotions such as fear and
    aggression and drives such as those for food and
    sex
  • includes the hippocampus, amygdala, and
    hypothalamus.

24
The Brain(Midbrain)
Amygdala ah-MIG-dah-la two almond-shaped
neural clusters that are components of the limbic
system and are linked to emotion
25
The Brain
  • Hippocampus
  • Functions
  • Learning
  • Memory

26
The Brain(MidBrain)
  • Hypothalamus
  • neural structure lying below (hypo) the thalamus
    directs several maintenance activities
  • eating
  • drinking
  • body temperature
  • helps govern the endocrine system via the
    pituitary gland
  • is linked to emotion

27
  • Thalamus
  • Located in the middle of the forebrain, is
    involved in receiving sensory information, doing
    some initial processing, and then relaying the
    sensory information to areas of the cortex,
    including the somatosensory cortex, primary
    auditory cortex, primary visual cortex.

The Brain(MidBrain)
28
The Limbic System
29
The Limbic System
  • Limbic structures form a doughnut-shaped neural
    system between the brains older parts and its
    cerebral hemispheres. Although part of the
    hormonal (endocrine) system, not the brain, the
    pituitary gland is controlled by the limbic
    systems hypothalamus, just above it.

30
The Cerebral Cortex (Forebrain)
31
The Cerebral Cortex
  • Cerebral Cortex
  • the intricate fabric of interconnected neural
    cells that covers the cerebral hemispheres
  • the bodys ultimate control and information
    processing center

32
The Cerebral Cortex
  • Frontal Lobes
  • involved in speaking and muscle movements and in
    making plans and judgments
  • Parietal Lobes
  • include the sensory cortex

33
The Cerebral Cortex(Forebrain)
Occipital Lobes include the visual areas, which
receive visual information from the opposite
visual field Temporal Lobes include the auditory
areas
34
The Cerebral Cortex
  • Motor Cortex
  • area at the rear of the frontal lobes that
    controls voluntary movements
  • Sensory Cortex
  • area at the front of the parietal lobes that
    registers and processes body sensations

35
The Cerebral Cortex
36
The Cerebral Cortex
  • Functional MRI scan shows the visual cortex
    activated as the subject looks at faces

37
Visual and Auditory Cortex
38
The Cerebral Cortex
  • Aphasia
  • impairment of language, usually caused by left
    hemisphere damage either to Brocas area
    (impairing speaking) or to Wernickes area
    (impairing understanding)
  • Brocas Area
  • an area of the left frontal lobe that directs the
    muscle movements involved in speech

39
The Cerebral Cortex
Wernickes Area an area of the left temporal
lobe involved in language comprehension and
expression
40
Specialization and Integration in Language
41
Specialization and Integration
When hearing a word, Auditory cortex and
Wernickes area
When seeing a word visual cortex and angular
gyrus
When speaking a word Brocas area and the motor
Cortex
42
Brain Structures and their Functions
43
Brain Reorganization
  • Plasticity
  • the brains capacity for modification, as evident
    in brain reorganization following damage
    (especially in children) and in experiments on
    the effects of experience on brain development

44
The Endocrine System
  • Endocrine System
  • the bodys slow chemical communication system
  • a set of glands that secrete hormones into the
    bloodstream

45
Neural and Hormonal Systems
  • Hormones
  • chemical messengers, mostly those manufactured by
    the endocrine glands, that are produced in one
    tissue and affect another
  • Adrenal ah-DREEN-el Glands
  • a pair of endocrine glands just above the kidneys
  • secrete the hormones epinephrine (adrenaline) and
    norepinephrine (noradrenaline), which help to
    arouse the body in times of stress
  • Pituitary Gland
  • under the influence of the hypothalamus, the
    pituitary regulates growth and controls other
    endocrine glands

46
Our Divided Brain
  • Corpus Callosum
  • large band of neural fibers
  • connects the two brain hemispheres
  • carries messages between the hemispheres

47
Our Divided Brain
  • The information highway from the eye to the brain

48
Our Divided Brain
  • Right Brained
  • Nonverbal It has a childlike ability to read,
    write, spell and understand speech.
  • Spatial Very good at solving spatial problems,
    such as arranging blocks to match a geometric
    design. The left hand (right hemisphere) is best
    at arranging blocks, a spatial task.
  • Holistic Processes information by combining
    parts into a meaningful whole. It is better at
    recognizing whole faces, emotions, etc.

49
Our Divided Brain
  • Left Brained
  • Verbal Very good at all language related
    abilities speaking, understanding, language,
    carrying on a conversation, reading, writing,
    spelling.
  • Mathematical Very good at mathematical skills
    adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing,
    solving complex problems in calculus, physics,
    and so on.
  • Analytic Can process information by analyzing
    each separate piece that makes up a whole.

50
Split Brain
  • a condition in which the two hemispheres of the
    brain are isolated by cutting the connecting
    fibers (mainly those of the corpus callosum)
    between them

51
Split Brain
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