Title: CENTRAL INTEGRATIVE SYSTEMS
1CENTRAL INTEGRATIVE SYSTEMS
- D. C. MIKULECKY
- PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY
- AND
- FACULTY MENTORING PROGRAM
2BODY RHYTHMS AND THE HYPOTHALAMUS
- CIRCADIAN RHYTHMS AND BIOLOGICAL CLOCKS
- SLEEP
3CIRCADIAN RHYTHMS AND BIOLOGICAL CLOCKS
- OVER 100 BODY FUNCTIONS VARY ON A 24-HOUR
SCHEDULE - THYROXIN SECRETION CONTROLLED BY THE HYPOTHALAMUS
- ALSO ACTH AND CORTISONE
- MASTER CLOCK SUPRACHIASMATIC NUCLEUS OF THE
HYPOTHALAMUS
4MANIFESTATIONS OF DAILY RHYTHMS
- BODY TEMPERATURE VARIATION
- DISRUPTION CAUSES PROBLEMS JET LAG
5SLEEP
- SLEEP HAS DIFFERENT STAGES
- NEURAL MECHANISMS OF SLEEP
- SLEEP DISORDERS
6SLEEP HAS DIFFERENT STAGES
- 3 TO 5 CYCLES PER NIGHT CONSISTING OF 5 STAGES
(I - V AND REM) - SLEEP STAGES BASED ON EEG ACTIVITY
- RAPID EYE MOVEMENT (REM) SLEEP
- SLEEP PATTERNS VARY WITH AGE
73 TO 5 CYCLES PER NIGHT CONSISTING OF 5 STAGES
(I - V AND REM)
- FREQUENCY OF ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY DECREASES AS
AMPLITUDE INCREASES - BY STAGE 4 HEART RATE AND BLOOD PRESSURE HAVE
DECREASED WHILE GI MOTILITY INCREASES
(PARASYMPATHETIC ACTIVITY) - REM SLEEP TAKES THE BRAIN FROM STAGE 4 BACK TO
STAGE 1 (SYMPATHETIC ACTIVITY) - REM SLEEP IS ASSOCIATED WITH VISUAL DREAMING
8SLEEP PATTERNS VARY WITH AGE
- WITH AGE TOTAL SLEEP TIME DECREASES
- ALSO THE REM SLEEP
- ALSO THE TIME SPENT IN STAGE 4
9NEURAL MECHANISMS OF SLEEP
- THE HYPOTHALAMUS AND BRAIN STEM ARE RESPONSIBLE
FOR SLEEP/AWAKE CYCLES - THE PREOPTIC AREA OF THE HYPOTHALAMUS INDUCES
NON-REM SLEEP - SEROTONON WILL ALSO INDUCE SLEEP WHEN INJECTED
INTO THIS AREA - RAPHE NUCLEUS MAY BE THE GENERATOR OF REM SLEEP
10SLEEP DISORDERS
- INSOMNIA INABILITY TO SLEEP, MAY BE CAUSED BY
DISRUPTION OF CIRCADIAN RHYTHMS. - NARCOLEPSY ATTACKS OF SLEEP AT ANY TIME, MAY BE
DUE TO RAPHE NUCLEUS REM-SLEEP GENERATOR. AN
INHERITED DISORDER. TREATED WITH AMPHETAMINES
11MOTIVATIONAL SYSTEMS
- HUNGER
- THIRST
- SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
12HUNGER
GLUCOSE RECEPTORS IN HYPOTHALAMUS
REDUCED AVAILABILITY OF GLUCOSE
SHORT TERM
MECHANO- RECEPTORS IN STOMACH
CONTRACTIONS OF EMPTY STOMACH
HUNGER
LACK OF FOOD
LOW TRIGLYCERIDE LEVELS IN FAT CELLS
LONG TERM
PANCREAS
13THIRST
OSMORECEPTORS IN SUPRAOPTIC AND
SUPRA- VENTRICULAR NUCLEI OF HYPOTHALAMUS
THIRST
WATER DEFICIENCY
WATER RETENTION BY KIDNEY
ADH SERETION BY PITUITARY
14SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
- ANTERIOR HYPOTHALAMUS ORGANIZES RESPONSES TO
PHERMONES - OLIFACTORY CUES SENT TO PYRIFORM CORTEX AND
AMYGDALA AND INDIRECTLY TO HYPOTHALAMUS - ANDROGENS DETERMINE RELEASE OF LEUTINIZING
HORMONE- CONSTANT OR CYCLIC
15LEARNING AND MEMORY
- ASSOSCIATIVE VS NONASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
- SHORT AND LONG TERM MEMORY
- NEURONAL PATHWAYS
- SPLIT BRAIN STUDIES
- CELLULAR MANIFESTATIONS
- USE AND DISUSE
16ASSOSCIATIVE VS NONASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
- HABITUATION AND SENSITIZATION ARE NONASSOCIATIVE
- CLASSICAL CONDITIONING IS ASSOCIATIVE
- OPERANT CONDITIONING IS ASSOCIATIVE
17CONDITIONED REFLEX
RESPONSE CLOSE EYE
RED NUCLEUS
STIMULUS AIR PUFF ON EYE
CEREBELLUM PURKINJE CELL
OLIVARY NUCLEUS
CLIMBING FIBER
18CONDITIONED REFLEX
CONDITIONING STIMULUS TONE
RESPONSE CLOSE EYE
RED NUCLEUS
COCHLEAR NUCLEUS
STIMULUS AIR PUFF ON EYE
CEREBELLUM PURKINJE CELL
OLIVARY NUCLEUS
PONTINE NUCLEUS
MOSSY FIBERS
CLIMBING FIBER
19CONDITIONED REFLEX
CONDITIONING STIMULUS TONE
RESPONSE CLOSE EYE
RED NUCLEUS
COCHLEAR NUCLEUS
CEREBELLUM PURKINJE CELL
PONTINE NUCLEUS
MOSSY FIBERS
20SHORT AND LONG TERM MEMORY
- SHORT-TERM MEMORY INVOLVES IMMEDIATE USE, IS
EASILY DISRUPTED AND AND IS SHORT LIVED - LONG-TERM MEMORY IS MORE STABLE
- INFORMATION IS PASSED FROM SHORT- TERM TO
LONG-TERM MEMORY BY A PROCESS CALLED CONSOLIDATION
21NEURONAL PATHWAYS
- MEMORY CIRCUITS PROVIDE A SIMPLE EXPLANAION FOR
MEMORY - THESE INVOLVE THE HYPOTHALAMUS AND AMYGDALA AS
WELL AS THE TEMPORAL LOBE AND THE HIPPOCAMPUS
22SPLIT BRAIN STUDIES
- INFORMATION IS PROCESSED AND STORED DIFFERENTLY
IN DIFFERENT SPECIES - MONKEYS NEED BOTH HEMESPHERES WHILE CATS CAN
LEARN IN ONE HEMISPHERE AND TRANSFER THE
INFORMATION TO THE OTHER
23CELLULAR MANIFESTATIONS
- HABITUATION IS A DECREASE IN SYNAPTIC
TRAQNSMISSION IN RESPONSE TO A REPEATED STIMULUS - SENSITIZATION INVOLVES AN INCREASE IN TRANSMITTER
RELEASE - CLASSICAL CONDITIONING IS A SENSITIZATION PROCESS
24USE AND DISUSE
- IN EXERCISE MUSCLES INCREASE MASS WITH USE
- NEURAL PATHWAYS CAN STRENGTHEN OR WEAKEN
CONNECTIONS BETWEEN NERVE CELLS - THE OPPOSITE ALSO HAPPENS ATROPHY WITH DISUSE
25LANGUAGE SYSTEMS
- DOMINANT AND NONDOMINANT HEMISPHERES
- ANATOMICAL CORRELATES OF SPEECH DISORDERS
26LOCALIZATION OF LANGUAGE FUNCTIONS
ASSOCIATION
COMPREHENSION
MOTOR PROGRAMS
27DOMINANT AND NONDOMINANT HEMISPHERES
- TYPICALLY, SPEECH AREA IN DOMINANT HEMISPHERE IS
LARGER - THIS DIFFERENCE APPEARS IN THE HUMAN FETUS BY THE
31ST WEEK OF GESTATION - NONDOMINANT HEMISPHERE IS RESPONSIBLE FOR
INTONATION AND EMOTIONAL ASPECTS
28ANATOMICAL CORRELATES OF SPEECH DISORDERS
- NONDOMINANT CORRELATE OF WERNICKES AND BROCAS
AREAS APROSODIAS-INABILITY TO UNDERSTAND OR
EXPRESS INTONATION - APHASIAS LANGUAGE DISORDER DUE TO BRAIN DAMAGE
- DYSLEXIA CONGENITAL DISORDER AFFECTING READING
29APHASIAS
- BROCAS DISRUPTION OF MOTOR CENTERS-AFFECTS BOTH
SPEECH AND WRITING - WERNICKES AREA LOSS OF COMPREHENSION
30LATERALITY OF BRAIN FUNCTION
- RIGHT AND LEFT BRAIN
- GENDER DIFFERENCES
31RIGHT AND LEFT BRAIN
- RIGHT HEMISPHERE SPATIAL ABILITIES, ARTISTIC AND
MUSICAL ABILITY - LEFT HEMISPHERE ANALYTICAL SKILLS
32GENDER DIFFERENCES
- MALES TEND TO EXHIBIT MORE LATERALIZATION OF
SPECIFIC TASKS - FEMALES USE BOTH HEMISPHERES MORE SYMMETRICALLY