Neurotransmitters
It's All Lobe
Your Brain on Drugs
Sandman
More Lobe!
100

This neurotransmitter is associated with mood regulation and can lead to bouts of depression. 

What is Serotonin? 

100

Lobe of the cerebral cortex placed just behind the forehead; directs language processions and higher order thinking such as decision making.

What is the Frontal Lobe?

100

An everyday term for compulsive substance use that continues despite harmful consequences.

What is addiction?

100

This disorder involves the inability to fall or stay asleep.

What is insomnia?  

100

This lobe is responsible for processing visual information. 

What is the occipital lobe? 

200

Initiating the reward system, this neurotransmitter regulates emotion and can be a cause for substance addiction and schizophrenia. 

What is Dopamine? 

200

 a limbic system neural structure that is located below the thalamus; directs the endocrine system and temperature.

What is the Hypothalamus?

200

This class of drugs regresses neural activity and slows body functions.

What are depressants? 

200

This stage of sleep is most associated with dreaming due to spiked brain activity.

What is REM sleep?

200

Which lobe contains the primary motor cortex? 

What is the frontal lobe? 

300

This neurotransmitter is most associated with muscle movement and memory. 

What is Acetylcholine? 

300

Often referred to as the 'little brain,'  it's function includes processing sensory input, balance and movement, and nonverbal learning and communication.

What is the Cerebellum? 

300

This class of drugs alter your state of consciousness and distort perception and evoke sensory images. 

What are hallucinogens? 

300

This term refers to your biological clock as it regulates sleep/wake cycles in a 24hr period.

What is circadian rhythm? 

300
This is the brain's ability to change by reorganizing after damage or by building new pathways based on experience. 

What is neuroplasticity? 

400

This neurotransmitter promotes relaxation and calmness as well as sleep/wake cycles. It is also affected by alcohol.

What is GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)?

400

This area of the brain is responsible for the production of speech and language. 

What is the Broca's area?  

400

This class of drugs increases neural activity and speed up body functions.

What are stimulants? 
400

This disorder is characterized by breathing repeatedly stopping and starting, often without the person knowing, leading to poor sleep quality, daytime fatigue, and serious health risks like heart problems.

What is sleep apnea? 


400

The limbic system includes the following EXCEPT: Hippocampus, Amygdala, Hypothalamus,  or Pons 

What is pons? 

500

The body's natural painkillers and mood elevators, reducing the perception of pain and stress while promoting feelings of pleasure and well-being

What are Endorphins? 

500

A cerebral cortex area at the front of the parietal lobes that registers and processes body touch and movement sensations. 

What is the somatosensory cortex?

500

natural or semi-synthetic drugs used for pain relief and causes euphoria, sedation, and slowed breathing; they include morphine, codeine, and heroin.

What are opiates?

500

Sleep stage 3 (NREM 3) is characterized by what kind of brain waves?

What are delta waves?

500

Areas of the cerebral cortex that are not involved in primary motor and sensory functions. 

What are association areas? 

600

What is happening in this image?

(answers may vary) This is the neurotransmitter system where neurotransmitters are released and received in the synapse. 

600

This small section is responsible for fear and aggression as well as the "fight-or-flight" responses. 

What is the Amygdala? 

600

A class of central nervous system depressant drugs used historically as sedatives, sleeping pills, and anesthetics.

What are Barbiturates? 

600

These disorders are characterized by the malfunction of normal paralysis to stop one from acting out dreams, sleep speaking or walking. 


What are REM sleep behavior disorders? 

600

A thin layer of interconnected neural cells responsible for higher-level thinking. 

What is the cerebral cortex? 

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