Title: Introduction to Psychology
1Introduction to Psychology
2Nervous System
- CNS Brain and Spinal Cord
- Peripheral Nervous System network of nerves that
carries information to and from the nervous
system
3Peripheral Nervous System
- Somatic System carries messages to and from
sense organs and skeletal muscles - Controls voluntary behavior
4Peripheral Nervous System
- Autonomic Nervous System glands and organs
automatic functions - Heartbeat, digestion
5Peripheral Nervous System
- Sympathetic fight or flight prepares for action
- Parasympathetic quiets the body lowers arousal
6Neurons
- Nerve cells in the brain
- Carry messages activate muscles and glands
- 100 billion neurons in the brain
7The Neuron
Fig. 3.8
8Parts of the Neuron
- Dendrites receives messages from other neurons
- Soma receives messages sends nerve impulse down
the axon
9Parts of the Neuron
- Axon thin fiber leading to the terminal buttons
nerve impulses travel down the axon carries
messages - Myelin sheath fatty layer covering the axon
that helps nerve impulses move faster
10Parts of the Neuron
- Synapse the microscopic space between the
neurons over which messages pass - Neurotransmitters travel across the axon
- Ions electrically charged molecules found inside
and outside the neuron, with or - charges
11Resting Potential
- Electrical charge of an inactive neuron
- -70 mv
- Messages from other neurons raise or lower the
resting potential
12Threshold
- If the charge raises to -50 mv, the neuron
reaches its threshold - Thresholdtrigger point for firing
- Ready to fire
13Neural Firing
- An action potential (nerve impulse) sweeps down
the axon - Ion channels open and sodium ions rush in
14After the action potential....
- Positive ions flow back out the neuron becomes
negatively charged again - Resting state is restored
- After firing, the neuron dips below resting level
and is less willing to fire
15Firing...
- Firing is an all or nothing event
- The neuron either fires, or doesnt fire
- It take 1/1000 of a second for a neuron to fire
on average, they fire between 1-400 times per
second
16Neurotransmitters
- Chemicals that alter activity in the neurons
- Neurotransmitters travel from the terminal
buttons across the synapse, and connect to
special receptors sites on the dendrites and soma
of the next neuron
17Neurotransmitters
- Neurotransmitters can excite or inhibit firing
18Types of Neurotransmitters
- Dopamine too littleParkinsons, too
muchschizophrenia - Acetylcholine activates muscles
- Serotonin deficiency associated with
depression/anxiety - Neuropeptides influence memory, pain, emotion,
and mood - Endorphins released by the pituitary glad
lessens pain
19The Brain
- Right and Left hemispheres
- Lateralization
- Divided by the corpus callosum
20Left and Right Hemispheres
- Left
- Detail oriented
- Speech and language
- Calculating
- Understands one word at a time, not the big
picture
- Right
- Non-verbal
- Face recognition
- Express/detect emotion
- Understanding speech context/nuances of language
21The Brains Four Lobes
Fig. 3.7
22Functions of Lobes of the Cortex
Involved in voluntary movement, thinking,
personality, and intentionality or purpose
Frontal lobes
Occipital lobes
Function in vision
Active role in hearing, language processing, and
memory
Temporal lobes
Roles in registering spatial location, attention,
and motor control
Parietal lobes
23The Brain
- Recent research
- Both heredity and environment shape the brain
- The role of experience and brain plasticity
24Dendritic Spreading
Fig. 3.11
25Pruning
- Changes to the dendrites and synapses
- Connections are formed and terminated
26Experience and the Brain
- Exposure to trauma
- PTSD reduced size of the hippocampus
- Depression
- Parts of the brain atrophy over time
- Addiction
- Changes in neurotransmitters
27Experience and the Brain
- Mice in deprived vs. enriched environments
differences in brain weight, neural connections
and activity - Children reared in deprived environments have
depressed brain activity (i.e. Romanian orphans) - Can be reversed brain plasticity/resilience
28The Brain in Adolescence
- Adolescent emotions
- Areas of the brain involved in emotional
regulation are still growing/changing - Poor self-control seek rewards and pleasure
- Risk taking
- Lack of practical experiences immature judgment
29Alcoholism
- Alcohol doesnt kill neurons, but damages the
dendrites - Affects communication between neurons
- Frontal lobe and limbic system
- Brain may atrophy