What part of the brain is responsible for an individual's heartbeat, breathing and automatic functioning?
Medulla Oblongata
This Lobe is responsible for your personality, decision making and voluntary muscle movements
What is Frontal Lobe?
This neurotransmitter is responsible for pleasure, satisfaction, and motivation.
What is dopamine?
This neurotransmitter can activate when an individual awakes paranoid and with a racing heartbeat from a harsh nightmare
What is Norepinephrine?
This psychologist is known for his famous classical conditioning experiment with dogs.
Who is Pavlov?
What part of the brain helps with balance and motor conditioning and connects to the brain stem?
What is the cerebellum
What is Parietal Lobe?
This neurotransmitter is responsible for learning and memory.
What is glutamate?
This lobe is damaged when Amy gets into a car accident where her head is flung back into her seat violently
What is Occipital Lobe?
This person created the hierarchy of needs (humanistic perspective)
What is Abraham Maslow?
This area in the brain is responsible for language production and speech.
What is Broca's Area?
This system of the brain involves autonomic processes and mechanisms of memory, emotions, and learning (hint: includes portions of the cerebral cortex --> thalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, and septal area)
What is Limbic System?
This neurotransmitter is responsible for alertness and attention (fight or flight).
What is norepinephrine?
This part of the brain helps keep Oscar balanced in soccer when he is running and kicking the ball
What is Cerebellum?
This disorder is known for an individual having two or more personalities and commonly experiences amnesia
What is Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)?
This area in the brain is responsible for understanding language and the meaning behind them
What is Wernicke's Area?
What is Occipital Lobe?
This is a disease where the immune system attacks the Myelin Sheath of the nerves, disrupting neural transmission. (symptoms include but aren't limited to blurred vision, fatigue, numbness, and difficulty concentrating.)
What is Multiple Sclerosis?
Too much of this neurotransmitter supplies the evidence that Tammy has schizophrenia
What is Dopamine?
This was a psychological experiment performed during August 1971. It was a two-week simulation of a prison environment that examined the effects of situational variables on participants' reactions and behaviors and documented the impacts of role play.
What is the Stanford Prison Experiment?
This language impairment results from brain damage in the left hemisphere (difficulty with speaking and comprehending language)
What is aphasia?
The damage of this Lobe results in loss of inhibition and talking (right damage) and results in impaired memory for verbal material (left damage)
What is Temporal Lobe?
Too much of this neurotransmitter can lead to overexcitement in the nerves, leading to brain cell damage, while too little of it can lead to developmental and intellectual delays.
What is glutamate?
Amelia can process all senses (except for smell) because of this structure in the brain
What is Thalamus?
The Solomon Asch experiment focused on this phenomenon by measuring the pressure needed by volunteers to convince the participant to agree with their purposefully false statements