Title: Introduction to Biopsychology [PSB 4002]
1Introduction to BiopsychologyPSB 4002
- Professor Josh Herrington
- DM 249 305-348-1230
- Jherr033_at_fiu.edu
- website dpblab.fiu.edu
2Big Questions for Biopsychology
- How is the nervous system structured and
organized? How does the nervous system develop? - How does the nervous system process and represent
information about an organisms internal and
external environment? - How does the brain change during learning and how
are memories stored and retrieved? How does the
brain think?
3Big Questions Continued
- What brain sites and activities underlie emotions
and feelings?
- What brain regions are involved in language?
- How does consciousness emerge from the
activities of a nervous system?
4What is inside your head?
- Your cerebral cortex, critical to higher brain
functions such as speech, thought, complex
movement patterns, goals and planning, has about
10 billion neurons (nerve cells)
- Each of these neurons receives connections from
other neurons at sites called synapses. There are
roughly one million billion of these connections
in just in your cerebral cortex
5What is inside your head?
- If you set out to count these connections, one
connection (synapse) per second, you would finish
counting 32 million years after you began
counting. - Another way of getting a feeling for this
complexity is to consider that a match heads
worth of your brain contains about 1 billion
connections.
6What is inside your head?
- If we consider how the connections between
neurons might be variously combined, the number
becomes hyperastronomical 10 followed by
millions of zeros. - So we have our first clue as to what makes the
brain so remarkable, because when one adds the
chemical factors (neurotransmitters, hormones)
that influence neurons, we are talking about the
most complicated material object in the known
universe.
7Complexity
- Complexity turns out to be difficult to define,
but there are five attributes that in combination
seem to be involved - large number of parts, large number of levels
- large number of interactions among parts and
levels - hierarchical organization (of multiple levels)
- non-linearity (not A ? B? C? D)
8Complexity
- and perhaps most important, emergent properties
(the whole is greater than the sum of the parts) - emergent properties cannot be predicted based on
knowledge of the properties of the parts alone
(example of water, H2O) - emergence will turn out to be important in how we
make sense of higher order mental functions, such
as thinking, dreaming, and consciousness
9A Systems Perspective
The brains job is to facilitate an adaptive
dynamic pattern of interaction among brain, body,
and the world In other words, neural systems are
elements of a larger system that includes the
rest of the organisms body and also its
situation in and interaction with the environment
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11Historical Perspective
- Traditional views within psychology, cognitive
science and philosophy have often characterized
the mind as an abstract information processor
largely divorced from the body and the
environment.
12Introduction to BiopsychologyPSB 4002
- Professor Josh Herrington
- DM 249 305-348-1230
- Jherr033_at_fiu.edu
- website dpblab.fiu.edu
13The Notion of Embodiment
- Proposes that all aspects of perception,
movement, cognition, and interactions with the
environment are based on the coupling of a brain,
in a body, in an environment. - Embodiment thus refers to bodily interactions
with the world, which is proposed to be a
necessary precondition for subjectivity, emotion,
value and meaning. These interactions are based
on (and constrained by) the actual shape and
physical capacities and limits of the body.
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15The overall function of the brain is to be well
informed about what goes on in the rest of the
body, about what goes on in itself, and about the
environment surrounding the organism. Regulating
both internal and external stimuli involves the
process of homeostasis. Homeostasis involves (at
the very least) the coupling of a number of
complex systems beyond simply the nervous system.
16The Bidirectional Coupling of Levels
- Meeting the challenge of homeostasis involves
- central nervous system
- autonomic (peripheral) nervous system
- endocrine system
- immune system
- limbic system
17Insight
- Given that the brains primary job is to
coordinate our dealings with the environment, it
is only in the context of the brain, body, and
environment system that the function of the
brain can be understood
18Neurons
- Like all cells of the body, neurons contain
- 1. nucleus
- 2. cytoplasm
- 3. cell membrane
- However, neurons are specialized to communicate
with other neurons, muscles, glands, and other
internal organs. This is achieved via - 4. axon
- 5. dendrites
- 6. synapses
-
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20Neurons
- Axons are coated (insulated) by
myelin, improving the flow of electrical events
from cell to cell
21Neurons
- Nerve cells are arranged in circuits and these
are arranged in neural networks - There are three basic types of neurons
- sensory neurons (input)
- motor neurons (output)
- interneurons (integration)
22The Language of the Nervous System
- There are two forms or channels of communication
between neurons - electrical action potentials / an all or
nothing mode - chemical neurotransmitters / many and modulated
23Introduction to BiopsychologyPSB 4002
- Professor Josh Herrington
- DM 249 305-348-1230
- Jherr033_at_fiu.edu
- website dpblab.fiu.edu
24First Exam
- Exam Date is Friday, January 25th
- Will be combine the terms outlined in the
textbook (Chapters 1, 3, and 6) with the
information in the class lectures. - IF ATTENDANCE IS SATISFACTORY then you will
receive the lecture notes to help you study one
week before the exam. You will receive sample
test questions to help you study.
25emergence
- The manner in which complex phenomena arise from
a collection of interactions between system
components - The outcome is more than the sum of its parts
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27- The brain is a complex temporally and spatially
multiscale structure that gives rise to complex
molecular, cellular, and neuronal phenomena that
together form a basis for perception, movement,
cognition.
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29The Language of the Nervous System
- There are two forms or channels of communication
between neurons - electrical action potentials / an all or
nothing mode - chemical neurotransmitters / many and modulated
30HOW NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH EACH OTHER CHEMICALLY
- The connection between two neurons is called a
synapse - The neurons are not in direct physical contact at
the synapse but are separated by a small gap
called the synaptic cleft - The neuron transmitting to another is called the
presynaptic neuron - The receiving neuron is the postsynaptic neuron
31The Synapse Between a Presynaptic Neuron and a
Postsynaptic Neuron
32HOW NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH EACH OTHER
- A Presynaptic Terminal Releases Neurotransmitter
at the Synapse
33Development of the Nervous System
- The human genome has approximately 25,000
genes the brain and spinal cord (CNS) has more
than 100 billion neurons. Clearly these numbers
indicate that nervous system development cannot
be simply genetically determined or prescribed.
- Gene expression is certainly involved in all
aspects of nervous system activity and the
behavior it supports, but many other factors and
processes must be at play
34Central Nervous System (CNS)
35- Development is an historical process
- initial conditions are powerful
- one thing leads to another
- what happens before guides and constrains
what can happen next - particular pathways taken promote or make less
- likely other pathways becoming available
36- Self-Organization
- Self-organization is the process in which pattern
at the global level of a system emerges from
numerous interactions among the lower-level
components of the system. - Thus, self-organization is an emergent property
of the system, rather than imposed on the system
by a pre-specified program or set of instructions.
37Self-Organization
Example termite mounds
38Introduction to BiopsychologyPSB 4002
- Professor Josh Herrington
- DM 249 305-348-1230
- Jherr033_at_fiu.edu
- website dpblab.fiu.edu
39First Exam
- Exam Date is Wednesday, January 30th
- Will be combine the terms outlined in the
textbook (Chapters 1, 3, and 6) with the
information in the class lectures. - IF ATTENDANCE IS SATISFACTORY then you will
receive the lecture notes to help you study one
week before the exam. You will receive sample
test questions to help you study.
40Two Key Concepts in Making Sense of Developmental
Processes - self-organization - loss of
degrees of freedom
41What determines the structure and behavior of a
system are particular relational conditions of
the system and the environment over time
Self-organization can be contrasted to the notion
of organization by design. Example A car or a
computer - in order to work, every detail must
function according to a preconceived plan or
design.
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44Loss of Degrees of Freedom The emergence of
structure or pattern at any point in a
developmental sequence constrains or limits what
structure or pattern can occur next.
Example moving into a new apartment
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46The instructions for development dont reside
or exist anywhere they emerge out of how an
organism lives and interacts with its world
This insight leads us to a key insight in our
exploration of development the minimum unit of
analysis for understanding the nervous systems is
the coupling of a brain, in a body, in a complex
physical and social environment
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48Development in utero
- The human ovum is the largest cell in the body,
roughly 15 times larger than other cells, but it
is still no larger than a dot, much much smaller
that the period at the end of this sentence. - Over about 277 days of gestation, this one
fertilized cell will become trillions of cells,
all organized into the various glands, tissues,
organs, etc. that constitute our brain/body
system.
49Some perspective How old are you?
- As it turns out, not a straightforward question,
as the egg that developed following fertilization
into you was formed when your mother was a fetus
so, at least from our mothers side of the
story, you are as old as your mother. - Human development before birth takes place in
three stages - zygote (first 2 weeks following conception)
- embryo (3-8 weeks following conception)
- fetus (8-38 weeks following conception)
50Principles at Play
- Self-organization
- Reducing degrees of freedom
- Sensitive periods
- Developmental cascades
51- This process of prenatal development consists of
a cascade of many thousands of events a cascade
is a succession of sequentially interdependent
events, with each event both triggered/influenced
by the event(s) preceding it and in turn itself
acting as a trigger for the next event(s). - The cascade of prenatal development involves gene
expression events, chemical events, cellular
events, and their interactions. No surprise -
these events are influenced by factors both
internal and external to the developing embryo or
fetus.
52Introduction to BiopsychologyPSB 4002
- Professor Josh Herrington
- DM 249 305-348-1230
- Jherr033_at_fiu.edu
- website dpblab.fiu.edu
53First Exam
- Exam Date is Wednesday, January 30th
- Will be combine the terms outlined in the
textbook (Chapters 1, 3, and 6) with the
information in the class lectures. - IF ATTENDANCE IS SATISFACTORY then you will
receive the lecture notes to help you study one
week before the exam. You will receive sample
test questions to help you study.
54Principles at Play
- Self-organization
- Reducing degrees of freedom
- Sensitive periods
- Developmental cascades
55Key Processes in the Prenatal Development of the
Nervous System
- Induction cells on the ectoderm form a neural
tube, induced by cells below it in the mesoderm - Proliferation cell division results in an
incredibly rapid generation of tens of thousands
of cells per minute (during the last half of
gestation, over 250,000 cells per minute)
56Key Processes (continued)
3. Migration moving from the neural tube to the
location where the cell will form a part of the
brain and become functional, with help from glial
cells 4. Aggregation similar cells come
together by means of chemical and electrical
gradients produced by surrounding cells
57Key Processes (continued)
5. Differentiation sprouting axon and dendrites
by means of a growth cone 6. Circuit and
Network Formation connecting synapses and axons
and producing neurotransmitters, thereby
establishing channels of communication across the
NS
58Circuit Formation
- During circuit formation, the axons of developing
neurons grow toward their target cells and form
functional connections. - To find their way, axons form growth cones at
their tip which sample the environment for
directional cues. - Chemical and molecular signposts attract or repel
the advancing axon, coaxing it along the way.
59Key Processes (continued)
7. Cell Death (apoptosis) based on patterns of
activity, experience, and use
60DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
- 8. The next stage of neural development,
circuit pruning, involves the elimination of
excess neurons and synapses. - neurons that are unsuccessful in finding a place
on a target cell, or that arrive late, or that
dont get activated, die.
- In the second step of circuit pruning, the
nervous system refines its organization and
continues to correct errors by eliminating large
numbers of excessive synapses. - synapses are strengthened or weakened depending
on whether the pre-synaptic neuron and the
postsynaptic neuron fire together (temporal
synchrony).
61Prenatal Development of the Nervous
System (summary of eight processes)
- Induction
- Proliferation
- Migration
- Aggregation
- Differentiation
- Circuit formation
- Cell death (apoptosis)
- Circuit pruning
62Prenatal Development
63Introduction to BiopsychologyPSB 4002
- Professor Josh Herrington
- DM 249 305-348-1230
- Jherr033_at_fiu.edu
- website dpblab.fiu.edu
64First Exam
- Exam Date is Wednesday, January 30th
- Will be combine the terms outlined in the
textbook (Chapters 1, 3, and 6) with the
information in the class lectures. - IF ATTENDANCE IS SATISFACTORY then you will
receive the lecture notes to help you study one
week before the exam. You will receive sample
test questions to help you study.
65Prenatal Development
66Fetal Programming
- The Prenatal environment provides experiences and
affordances that allow for typical neural
development
67POSTNATAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
- patterns of increased connectivity and
organization, and synchronization of - activity
- increased number of dendrites, axon branches,
synapses - increased brain weight, increased thickness of
cortex - increasing degree of mylenation of axons
- all of these processes involve experience and
activity-dependent competition and selection
68POSTNATAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
- The neural networks of the brain are made during
development by cellular movement, extensions, and
connections increasing numbers of neurons. - The number of cells being made, dying, and
becoming incorporated into the nervous system is
huge. The entire situation is a dynamic one,
depending on signals, proteins, cell movement,
divisions, gradients, and cell death, all
interacting at many levels.
69POSTNATAL DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE IN THE NERVOUS
SYSTEM
- Stimulation continues to shape synaptic
construction and reconstruction throughout the
individuals life. - Much of the change resulting from experience in
the mature brain involves reorganization, a shift
in connections that changes the function of an
area of the brain.
70Nervous System
- The process of nervous system development is
cumulative (builds on itself) events occurring
in one place require that previous events have
occurred at other places. In other words, brain
structure and function is - historical
-
- situated
- contingent
71Nervous System
- The KEY mechanisms involved in the process of
nervous system development are - competition
-
- selection
72Nervous System
- The notion of experience-dependent development
-
- -interactions with the environment modify gene
activity and expression and shape the course of
nervous system construction and modification
73Postnatal Maternal Care in Rodents
Variations in care lead to variations in
offspring phenotype
74stress responsivity
response to reward
natural variations in maternal care
cognition
High vs. Low levels of licking/grooming
stimulation of pups
social behavior
75Real Time/ Developmental Time
- Real Time firing patterns of diverse neural
networks cell groups transmit information to
each other activities of brain regions cohere or
synchronize it real time (we can now observe this
with neural imaging technology) - Developmental Time increasing specification of
structure increased levels of organization based
on real time use. The overall cumulative effects
of activity and experience over time sculpts the
nervous system.
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