Neurotransmitters
Parts of the Brain
Parts of the Brain 2.0
Imaging Techniques
All about them Neurons
100

This neurotransmitter is the feeling pleasure hormone.

What is dopamine?

100

This section of the brain controls our vital functions such as heart rate and breathing rate. 

What is the brainstem?

100

This lobe of the brain is primarily responsible for sensory input.

What is the parietal lobe?

100

This imaging technique uses magnetic fields and radio waves to create detailed images of the brain.

What is an MRI?

100

This is the name for the teeny tiny gap between neurons.

What is the synapse?

200

This neurotransmitter is responsible for emotional arousal. 

What is serotonin?
200

This lobe of the brain is responsible for seeing.

What is the occipital lobe?

200

This part of the brain is responsible for decision making. Damaging it can lead to increased spontaneity. 

What is the frontal lobe?

200

This imaging technique uses x-rays to create a 3D image of the brain.

What is a CT/CAT scan?

200

This type of neuron is coated in a fatty substance and goes 150m/s.

What is a myelinated neuron?

300

This neurotransmitter has a key role in your body's fight or flight response. 

What is norepinephrine? 

300
This part of the brain plays the biggest role in our memory.

What is the hippocampus?

300

This structure of the brain acts as bridge between the left and right hemisphere. 

What is the corpus callosum?

300

This type of imaging combines 2 other techniques to create one extremely detailed and informative image. 

What is an fMRI?

300

This is the name for the principle that explains how neurons will always fire at the same intensity no matter what.

What is the all or non principle? 

400

This neurotransmitter keeps us from giving up working out and makes sure we go back for more.

What are endorphins? 

400

This part of the brain helps with our balance and voluntary movement. Think big.

What is the cerebellum?
400

This part of the brain is all about homeostasis (keeping the body balanced and in a chill state)

What is the hypothalamus?

400

This is the only imaging technique that arguably isn't an image, it's a chart.

What is an electroencephalograph or EEG? 

400
To fire an action potential, neurons must pass this charge aka the Threshold.

What is -55 mV?

500

This neurotransmitter is associated with Alzheimer's disease. 

What is acetylcholine? 

500

When this part of the brain is damaged, a person will have difficulty comprehending speech.

What is Wernicke's area?

500

Phineas Gage got a pipe through this lobe of his brain.

What is the frontal lobe?

500

This brain imaging technique combines CT scans and radioactive tracers to produce 3D images of brain activity.

What is a PET scan?

500

This part of the neuron releases neurotransmitters.

What is the nerve ending?

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