Brain Imaging Basics 📸
Functional vs Structural Techniques
LOF 🤣
Neuroplasticity in Action
🕸️
🤔 Case Studies & Applications 🎨
100

The method psychologists use to observe the brain’s structure or activity without surgery.

💬 What is brain imaging?

100

This type of scan is used to detect physical brain damage or structural abnormalities.

💬 What is an MRI?

100

The theory that specific parts of the brain control specific behaviors or cognitive processes.

💬 What is localization of function?

100

The brain’s ability to reorganize itself and form new neural connections.

💬 What is neuroplasticity?

100

Survived a railroad accident that revealed the frontal lobe’s role in personality and impulse control.

💬 Who is Phineas Gage?

200

A brain scan that uses magnetic fields and radio waves to show detailed brain structures.

💬 What is an MRI?

200

This type of scan (think general type), shows brain activity by following how glucose or oxygen is used in different brain areas.

💬 What is a functional scan?

200

The area of the brain that controls speech production, named after a French neurologist.

💬 What is Broca’s area?

200

When neurons are activated repeatedly, their connection becomes stronger — “neurons that fire together, wire together.”

💬 What is long-term potentiation?

200

Could understand language but could only say one word after damage to his left frontal lobe.

💬 Who is Broca’s patient, “Tan”?

300

The general difference between structural and functional scans in brain research.

💬 What is that structural scans show what the brain looks like, while functional scans show what the brain does?

300

This scan can compare a “resting” brain and an “active” brain to reveal which areas are working.

💬 What is a PET scan?

300

The hippocampus is involved in this cognitive process related to learning and navigation.

💬 What is memory?

300

The process of eliminating weak or unused synaptic connections.

💬 What is synaptic pruning?

300

Could perform habits like walking home but couldn’t form new memories after brain damage.

💬 Who is Eugene Pauly?

400

A functional scan that uses radioactive glucose to detect brain activity during specific tasks.

💬 What is a PET scan?

400

Outline one reason why brain imaging techniques are used in psychological research.

💬 What is to study the relationship between brain structure/activity and behavior?

400

The amygdala is most closely associated with this emotional process.

💬 What is fear or emotion processing?

400

The brain can reorganize itself after injury so undamaged areas take over lost functions.

💬 What is cortical remapping?

400

Brain researchers must check whether participants with brain injuries can understand and agree to take part in a study.

💬 What is assessing capacity to consent?

500

This term describes a limitation of brain scans — they show associations, not direct cause and effect.

💬 What is correlation, not causation?

500

Explain one strength and one limitation of using brain imaging techniques in research.

💬 What is that they are non-invasive and provide rich data, but are expensive and only show correlations?

500

The frontal lobe is responsible for this type of higher-order thinking and self-control.

💬 What is decision-making or executive function?

500

Draganski (2004) showed that learning to juggle caused an increase in grey matter here.

💬 What is the mid-temporal area?

500

Researchers must 1) protect participants from distress and 2) get renewed permission if their condition changes.

💬 What are minimizing harm and reconsent?

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