Learning and Memory
Language and Neurological Disorders
Schizophrenia and Affective
Anxiety/ADHD/Stress
Substance Use
100

Differentiate between instrumental and classical conditioning. Describe the biology behind both of them 

talk through the two diagrams from the slides

100

Define metastasis. What kind of tumors metastasize?

Metastasis means to move throughout the body. Malignant tumors metastasize because they don't have borders

100

What type of medication is used to treat schizophrenia/ What side effects occur as a result?

dopamine antagonists eliminate some positive symptoms and dopamine agonists produce schizophrenia like symptoms; tardive dyskinesia and supersensitivity results from prolonged treatment of dopamine agonists 

100

What kind of medication was initially used to treat anxiety?Explain its mechanism of action 

Benzos - work on GABA receptors -> suppresses GABA - > sedation (this is not a very long term/effective treatment due to amount of cons) 

now first line - SSRIS

100

What are the 3 opiate receptors and what are each responsible for 

mu, delta, kappa 

mu and delta -> reinforcement

kappa -> aversive effects (e.g. hangover)

200

Explain what causes an NMDA channel to open

*really know the names of what's involved*

NMDA receptor is sensitive to glutamate but not enough to pop out magnesium so ampa receptor comes  and causes depolarization which pops out the magnesium 

*this is related to LLTP and without this combo of NMDA and AMPA we wouldn't have as much learning 

200

Describe TBI sequela. 

***Really know the neuronal death is not specifically from lack of oxygen and that glutamate plays a role in neuronal death as it feeds the cell so decreased glutamate is important in the neuronal death process 

200

Describe brain differences seen in those with symptoms of schiophrenia?

50% more pruning when adolescents, less gray matter, enlarged ventricles (become enlarged to "fill up the space" left by gray matter loss)

200

What are treatments for OCD? What areas of the brain are involved? 

Drug treatment or behavior therapy that reduces activity of orbitofrontal cortex and caudate nucleus (most effective are serotonin agonists such as clomipramine)

Cingulotomy – destruction of fibers in subcortical frontal lobe (cingulate cortex) and region with fibers connecting BG to prefrontal cortex

DBS of subthalamic nucleus (plays role in cortical-basal ganglia pathway)

200

Explain the biological basis for the development and maintenance of addiction 

all about that mesolimbic and VTA (rewards center) 

300

Differentiate between associative and non-associative long-term potentiation (learning) 

associative -> instrumental (operant) conditioning

non-associative -> classical conditioning 

300

NAme treatment options for Strokes

Blood thinner to prevent future clots/strokes

Medication to reduce high BP

Brain surgery to seal off weak/damaged blood vessels

Antibiotics if result of infection

Clot-dissolving drug (tPA, tissue plasminogen activator) if within 3 hours

Mechanical (surgical) means to remove clots (corkscrew or suction)->Problem if difficult to reach

300

Describe treatments used for depression 

electroconvulsive therapy, transcranial magnetic stimulation, deep brain stimulation, Tryptophan Depletion Procedure, selective sleep deprivation, total sleep deprivation

300

What differences in brain activity and anatomy are seen in those with Autism? What do they reflect? 

faster development first 2-3 years then slower; Fusiform face area (FFA), located on region of visual association cortex on base of brain, involved in recognition of individual faces – decreased activity in autism; also decreased activity in mirror neuron system -> no yawning contagion

**reflect increased difficulty reading social cues and subtle social cues on individual faces 


**also increased volume in caudate nucleus - Hollander and colleagues found volume of right caudate nucleus was positively correlated with ratings of repetitive behavior in patients with ASD

300

Describe nicotine in the brain 

nicotine has specific receptor - > nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (look at diagram)

400

Name all parts of the limbic cortex and explain their function 

HAT Hippo

Hypothalamus - really important because it's right on top of the pituitary gland and helps stimulate stress

amygdala - emotion

thalamus - relay center

hippocampus - memory

400

What's a glioma? Name the 4 kinds we learned in class

Cancerous brain tumor composed of one of several types of glial cells; astrocytoma, ependymoma, medulloblastoma(this is the only glioma not named after a glial cell), oligodendrocytoma

400

Name and describe the 3 biological treatments for affective disorders that are not medication.. Which has the lowest relapse rate?

ECT, TMS, DBS - DBS has lowest relapse rate


ECT -  almost immediate effects, decreases brain activity and raises seizure threshold of brain – mechanism for alleviating depression is unclear (high relapse)

TMS -strong, localized magnetic field into prefrontal cortex of brain; response rates <30%, high relapse rates

DBS- of subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (medial PFC), nucleus accumbens – better improvement and remissions rates, less relapse

400

What neuropsychological tests would you use to assess for attention?

continuous performance tests -Conners CPT 


*also behavioral observations, clinical symptom reporting, working memory/EF tasks such as stroop 

400

Name the author that found that cannabis users can outperform others if properly motivated in a task 

Dr. Hirst

500

Explain Alzheimer's disease from a neuronal level (think back to the diagram in the slides and the vocab that was used)

review 6 ppt slide 21

500
Name and describe all aphasia covered in this course

*focus on what they can NOT do 

transcortical motor aphasia (not fluent), transcortical sensory aphasia(no comprehension), mixed transcortical aphasia (not fluent, no comprehension), wernicke (not repeating, no comprehension), conduction (no repeating), brocas (not fluent, no repeating)

500

Define hypofrontality

Decreased activity of prefrontal cortex believed responsible for negative symptoms of schizophrenia

***under activation in the frontal cortex, depressive symptoms can also lead to lack of attention 

- Poor performance on neuropsychological tests that are sensitive to prefrontal damage, Poor performance on concentration and focused attention tasks

500

Explain the physiology of the stress response 


glucocorticoids (especially secreted during times of stress - adrenal cortex hormone); check out the diagram on the glucocortcoids slide

500

Alcohol produces 2 effects that act on different receptors. What are those effects and what receptors are involved?

sedation and impacts on memory 

impacts on memory -> NMDA receptor on hippocampal area 

sedation -> GABA receptors 

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