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Early Ideas about Brain and Behavior

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Early Ideas about Brain and Behavior Mind, Brain and Behavior Neuroscientists want to unify the science of the mind with the science of the brain. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Ideas about Brain and Behavior


1
Early Ideas about Brain and Behavior
2
Mind, Brain and Behavior
  • Neuroscientists want to unify the science of the
    mind with the science of the brain.
  • Actions of the brain underlie all behavior.
  • What we call mind is a range of functions carried
    out by the brain.
  • Neural science explains behavior in terms of
    brain activities.
  • Where does psychology fit?

3
Where Does Mind Reside?
  • Which part of the body is the seat of the soul,
    the repository of memory?
  • Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) said the heart.
  • Hippocrates (460-379 B.C.) said the brain.
  • Galen (130-200 A.D.) agreed with Hippocrates
  • Cerebrum vs cerebellum
  • Ventricles do the work

4
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5
19th Century Views
  • By the 1800s, the nervous system had been
    completely dissected and gross anatomy described.
  • Injury to the brain disrupts functioning.
  • Brain communicates with the body via nerves.
  • The brain has parts that probably perform
    different functions.
  • The brain follows laws of nature and operates
    like a machine.

6
Understanding by Analogy
  • Metaphors have always been drawn from discoveries
    in the physical world fluid mechanics,
    windmills, man as machine.
  • Modern analogies
  • Mind as switchboard
  • Mind as computer

7
Discarded Theories
  • Fluid in ventricles, flow of humors
  • Galen
  • Body as machine explained by mechanics
  • Nerves as hollow tubes full of gas or fluid
  • Descartes
  • Nerves as wires
  • Galvani, du Bois-Reymond, Muller, Helmholtz

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9
The Discovery of the Neuron
  • Golgi developed a silver staining method that
    revealed the cell body and projections of the
    neuron.
  • Ramon y Cajal used the technique to show that
    neurons do not quite touch.
  • Neurons are a network of separate (discrete)
    cells that communicate.
  • Galvani showed that the signaling is electric.

10
Nissl Stain
Golgi Stain
11
Localization vs Distribution
  • Are specific functions carried out in specific
    regions of the brain?
  • Are functions an emergent property of brain
    activity as a whole?
  • Todays neuroscience still debates this.
  • The answers appear somewhere between the two
    extremes.

12
Two Alternative Views
  • Cellular connectionism
  • Individual neurons are the signaling elements of
    the nervous system, arranged in functional groups
  • Supported by empirical observations of Ramon y
    Cajal, Wernicke, Jackson, Sherrington.
  • The aggregate field view
  • All regions of the brain participate in all
    mental functions.
  • Mind is NOT completely biological

13
The Localization Debate
  • Gall the brain consists of 35 organs
    corresponding to mental faculties.
  • Observable through bumps on the head.
  • Phrenology anatomical basis for personology
  • Flourens all perceptions, all volitions
    occupy the same seat
  • Aggregate field view
  • A reaction against strict materialism (mind not
    completely biological).

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15
The Discovery of Localization
  • Imaging techniques that show the brain in action
    confirm that certain functions are carried out in
    specific areas of the brain.
  • This was difficult to see early on because of
    parallel processing
  • Each function is subserved by more than one
    neural pathway.
  • When one pathway is damaged, others may
    compensate, making localization harder to see.

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17
Support for the Field View
  • Lashley found that the greater the lesions, the
    greater the impairment in functioning.
  • No matter where lesions were made, learning was
    impaired.
  • Mass action -- brain mass, not specific regions
    was most important to functioning.
  • Maze learning involves multiple functions, so it
    is unsuitable for studying localization.

18
The Current View
  • Functions consist of multiple processes that
    occur in specific areas of the brain.
  • Imaging studies reveal the different processes,
    called elementary operations.
  • Processing is both serial and parallel.
  • Even the simplest mental activity requires
    coordination of processes in multiple areas of
    the brain.
  • Such processing appears introspectively seamless.
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