Lobes
CNS
PNS
Drug Effects
Disorders
100

The Brain is divided into how many lobes? Name them.

4 lobes! Frontal, Temporal, Parietal, and Occipital Lobe

100

Which part of the brain controls heartbeat and breathing?

The Medula!

100

How is the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) different from the Central Nervous System (CNS)?

The PNS includes the nerves all over our body (cranial and spinal nerves), but the CNS includes only the brain and the Spine. Though the PNS is connected to the CNS.

100

What is melatonin?

It is associated with your quality of sleep. It is a natural hormone produced in your brain that helps to regulate your body's sleep-wake cycle.

100

Which disorder is caused by abnormal electrical activity in the brain?

Seizures

200

This Lobe is mainly in charge of the sight, translating what we see into something we can understand.

The Occipital Lobe!

200

What two main structures are included in the Central Nervous System?

The Brain and Spine.

200
What are at least two difference between Somatic and Autonomic Nervous System? 

Somatic Nervous System - voluntary, relays information from skin, sense organ and skeletal muscles to CNS

Autonomic Nervous System - involuntary, relays information to internal organs

200

Which drug(s) acts as a stimulant to the Nervous System?

Caffeine and Nicotine

200

What does multiple sclerosis damages?

The body's immune system eats away at the protective myelin sheaths that covers axons of the neurons and interferes with communication between nerves.

300

What is conservation, a concept discussed by Piaget? Summarize in your own words, based on the notes.

It is the ability to understand that different objects although they might have the same height, will hold different amounts of liquid because of the different shape of the object.

300

What is the cerebellum responsible for?

The cerebellum is responsible for coordination of movement and aspects of motor learning.

300

All of which are which nervous System at work? 

slowing heart rate after stress, increasing saliva and stomach acid for digestion, constricting pupils, and contracting the bladder to urinate.

The Parasympathetic Nervous System

300
How does Alcohol act as a depressant for the Nervous System?

Your blood can easily take in alcohol, so your body quickly absorb it and it slows down functions in the Nervous system.

300

What happens in parkinson's disease?

shaking (tremors) and difficulty with walking, movement, and coordination, and have low brain dopamine concentrations.

400
What usually happens when one part of the brain is not functioning properly?

One cortical region will often compensate for another region which is not functioning optimally. Essentially, another part of the brain will help it out!

400

What is the difference between Broca's and Wernicke's area? i.e. what are their functions or what does this areas do?

Broca's are is important for the production of speech while Wernicke's are is responsible for comprehension of language and the production of meaningful speech.

400

Give at least two example of an action that would controlled by the Peripheral nervous System

heart rate regulation, digestion, breathing, sweating, pupil dilation, and transmitting sensory information like pain or touch from the skin

400

What affect does Marijuana have on the Nervous system?

The suppression of memory and learning centers in the brain.

400

What causes chickenpox?

The varicella-zoster virus, the virus remains inactive in certain nerves in the body.

500

What parts of the brain did we test, using the blindfolded spatial task lab? What is the function of that or those lobes? 

Mainly the parietal lobe, responsible for spatial function and the temporal lobe, involved in memory and speech.
500

What part of the brain is damaged is a person a person  cannot speak but can understand language?

Most likely has damage to Broca's area, a condition known as Broca's aphasia.

500

Describe the process of why your hand would instinctively move away after accidentaly touching a hot stove.

When touching something hot, sensory nerves in the hand (PNS) send signals to the spinal cord (CNS), which immediately sends a signal back via motor nerves (PNS) to withdraw the hand.

500

Both Caffeine and Nicotine act as a stimulant for the Nervous system, but what is the difference between the two drugs' effects on the Nervous system?

Caffeine suppresses melatonin and promotes adrenalin. Nicotine cause an increase release of neurotransmitters and is highly addictive and your brain quickly adjust to you, making someone need more and more of it.
500

Which two neurological conditions both affect movement and coordination, but differ in cause—one results from low dopamine levels in the brain, while the other stems from damage to the developing brain.

Parkinson’s Disease and Cerebral Palsy

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