Involves the question of whether our mind and body are distinct, separate entities or whether they are one and the same thing.
The mind-body problem
What is the associate cortex area in the parietal lobe and what is it responsible for?
Somatosensory cortex (sensory information)
What is neuroplasticity?
The ability of the brain and nervous system to change in response to experience
How is a brain injury defined in Psychology
An injury that impairs the normal functioning of the brain
E.g. Year 11 Psychology students at LC, Pakenham willl perform better on their U1 AOS 2 SAC if they study for 30 mins 3 times per week.
What is Phrenology and who is the Physician responsible?
An extreme position that the brain was composed of distinctive, separate parts and that each part had a different function.
Franz Gall
List two functions of the temporal lobe
Memory, language comprehension, taste perception
List two structures of a neuron and their function
What are the two types of stroke.
Ischaemic stroke: blockage
Haemorrhagic stroke: brain bleed
Explain the difference between the IV and DV and what group in an experiment is exposed to which.
IV- what you manipulate (experimental group)
DV- what you are trying to measure (control group)
List three first brain experiments.
Brain ablation
Brain lesioning
Electrical stimulation
Split brain
What three strucures make up the hindbrain
Medulla, pons and cerebellum
List three key features of adaptive plasticity
Sprouting, re-routing and pruning.
What is an aquired brain injury and what are the two types
An acquired brain injury (ABI) refers to any type of brain damage or disorder that impairs or interferes with the normal functioning of the brain, either temporarily or permanently, and occurs after birth.
Sudden onset-at one time and Insidious onset: Gradually develops over a period of time.
List and explain three ethical concepts
Teacher to score
List four neuroimaging techniques used to study the brain and its functioning.
MRI
fMRI
PET
CT
Explain the function of the following: reticular formation, primary motor cortex, Broca's area, primary visual cortex
Filtering Sensory Information or Regulating Alertness and Arousal, initiate and control voluntary bodily movements by sending messages to the skeletal muscles, soeech production, processes visual information from the eye
Explain experience-expectant versus experience-dependent plasticity
Experience-Dependent Plasticity: refers to brain changes that occur as a result of exposure to environmental experiences that are unique to each individual.
Experience-Expectant Plasticity: involves brain changes that occur in response to environmental experiences that are ordinarily expected for a member of a species
Using an example of an ABI, explain three possible side effects referencing the BPS model
Teacher to decide.
List four types of data and what each one is
What is a split brain procudure? What it is used to treat? Why is it effective? Who was the scientist awrded a nobel prize for their research on this?
Severe the two hemispheres BUT keep the corpus callosum in tact at the hindbrain.
Used to treat sezuires when all other treatment options have failed.
Effective because it effects the interaction between the two cerebral hemispheres.
Roger Sperry.
Explain the term hemispheric specilisation and list three specialist functions of the left and right hemisphere
Connected by the corpus callosum, the lobesmay have specialised functions based on structures in each hemisphere. E.g. left= Verbal Tasks, Analytical Thinking & Logical Reasoning. Right= Spatial and Visual Thinking, Recognition, Creativity and Fantasy
Explain the difference between Broca and Wernicke's aphasia, with a cause, and site of damage.
Broca aphasia (B area- left frontal lobe) impairs speech production or fluent speech. Wernicke's aphasia (W area left temporal lobe), both caused by stroke.
What is CTE? List two symptoms, how it is diagnosed and a possible sport responsible.
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a progressive and fatal brain disease characterized by brain degeneration caused by ongong concussion.
Memory loss, headaches, mood disturbances
Diagnosed at autopsy
Football
Brain research question