The Brain
Neuroplasticity
Neurotransmitters
Hormones & Pheromones
Genetics
100

The idea that a behavior is associated with a specific brain region.

Localization of function

100

The brain’s ability to alter its own structure following changes within the body or in the external environment

Neuroplasticity

100

The basic "contacting point" between neurons.

Synapse or synaptic gap

100

Hormones are chemicals secreted by ____________ and carried through the _____________ to other parts of the body, where they act on specific target tissues to produce a specific physiological effect.

endocrine glands, bloodstream

100

What is genotype?

The genetic makeup of an individual. The alleles possessed at a given locus

200

What does an MRI show us?

soft tissue/structure, bones, blood vessels.

200

It makes neural networks bigger and stronger.

Repetition

200

A molecule that binds to a receptor and initiates a response like that of a neurotransmitter. (It mimics a natural substance)

Agonist


200

A chemical substance produced and released into the environment by an animal affecting the behavior or physiology of others of its own species.

Pheromones

200

What does the expression “nature vs. nurture” mean?

Whether who we are is determined by genes (nature) or by environmental factors (nurture)

300

Besides memory, what else is the hippocampus particularly important for?

Spatial orientation/navigation

300

What happens to neural networks that are not used?

They end up being pruned (cut off) to enhance the performance of the active ones. (neural pruning)

300

This neurotransmitter is linked reinforcement and rewards.

Dopamine

300

What is oxytocin? When is it important?

A hormone, often called the "love hormone".  Present during childbirth, lactation, relationships (trust building)

300

Study that aimed to determine whether there is evidence for a gene-environment interaction for a mutation of the serotonin transporter gene 5-HTT

Caspi et al.

400

What are the limitations of using fMRI?

Patients with metal parts in their bodies cannot be scanned due to the magnets;  the space inside is very small;  very loud;  patients need to stay still for 30-40 minutes;  expensive ;  some brain activity might be due to “noise” or spontaneous activity; the use of color in the image might be misleading.

400

How can we observe the effects of neuroplasticity in the brain?

By measuring changes in the density and volume of relevant brain structures.

400

True or false? A neurotransmitter is a chemical messenger, but the neurotransmission is an electro-chemical process.

True

400

Name 2 hormones, and 1 piece of research for each. 

testosterone- Zak et al (2009) (aggression in animals), Albert et al. (castration of rats)

cortisol- Baumgartner et al. (2008) (trust in relationships) or Ditzen et al. (2009), Radke (fMRI and trust)

etc.

400

What is the difference between Monozygotic (MZ) and Dizygotic (DZ) Twins?  Why do we study them?

MZ: 

  • One egg + one sperm -> one zygote -> splits into two embryos.
  • Genetics: ~100% identical DNA

DZ:

  • Two eggs + two different sperm -> two zygotes.
  • Genetics: ~50% shared DNA (like any siblings). _________________________________
  • Higher concordance rates (similarity) for a trait in MZ twins compared to DZ twins suggest a strong genetic link- ruling out environmental explanations for something (like aggression, depression, etc).
500

What have we learned from the case of the patient HM?

There are different types of memory, assigned to different places in the brain. HM had his procedural memory preserved, but his declarative memory was lost.

500

When investigating neuroplasticity, why is it useful to take repeated scans of the brain?

Because neuroplasticity is change that occurs in the brain, and change takes time and cannot be observed with a single measurement.

500

Once the brain forms a synapse, it can be either strengthened or weakened. What does it depend on?

How often the synapse is used

500

The existence of a human pheromone is still debatable. How did Wedekind et al. suggest its existence?

They found that MHC (a group of genes that allow the immune system to recognize pathogens) may influence human mate choice based on odor preferences (which suggests that humans’ ability to smell this is similar to animals that release pheromones).

500

What does the expression “survival of the fittest” mean?

Organisms which survive and reproduce will pass their characteristics (genes) onto the next generation (and those who don’t, won’t). Genes which encode behaviors that increase the likelihood of survival and/or reproduction are more likely to be present in the gene pool of the next generation.

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