Evolution, Genetics & Experience
Anatomy
Brain Damage & Neuroplasticity
Memory
Drugs & Disorders
100

What are genes?

Units of heredity passed from parents to offspring

100
What is the sympathetic nervous system?

The division of the autonomic nervous system that prepares the body for a "fight or flight" response

100

What is a stroke?

Type of brain damage occurs when blood flow to a region of the brain is blocked or reduced, often due to a clot or hemorrhage

100

Type of memory that involves facts, names, dates, and other information that can be consciously recalled, and it is divided into semantic and episodic forms. 

What is declarative (Explicit) memory?

100
When tolerance of one drug results in reduced sensitivity to another drug with similar effects

What is cross-tolerance?

200

What is phenotype?

The physical traits of an organism

200

This structure of the ear is also known as the ear drum.

Tympanic membrane

200

Closed-head TBI that involve damage to the cerebral circulatory system when the brain slams against the inside of the skull and accumulates blood in the subdural space.

What is a contusion?

200

Stage of memory that holds sensory information for a brief period, such as visual (iconic) and auditory (echoic) information

What is sensory memory?

200

What is a common withdrawal symptom alcohol use that involves shaking and anxiety?

What are tremors?

300

What is a dominant allele?

Type of allele that masks the effects of another, only requires one to express

300

The primary limbic system function is:

To process and regulate emotion and learning, while also dealing with sexual stimulation, learning, and memory.

300

Brain tumor that does not invade neighboring tissues, surgically removable with little risk of further growth.

What is a benign brain tumor?

300

Amnesia involves difficulty forming new memories while retaining the ability to recall past memories 

What is anterograde amnesia?

300

This type of bipolar disorder is characterized by manic episodes that can disrupt daily life, often requiring hospitalization, while depressive episodes may or may not occur

What is Bipolar 1 disorder?

400

What is phenylketonuria (PKU)?

A genetic condition resulting from a build up of phenylalanine leading to intellectual disabilities and is a recessive disorder so would require one from each parent to have the disorder. 

400

The ____________ is the largest part of the brain responsible for complex thought, higher order functioning, as well as coordinating and initiating movement.

Cerebral cortex (saying frontal lobe is acceptable for points, it is within the cerebral cortex but it says the largest part so in a general sense it is the cerebral cortex)

400

Progressive neurological disease, caused by degeneration of dopamine-producing neurons in the substantial nigra, leads to symptoms such as tremors, rigidity, and bradykinesia. 

What is Parkinson's disease?

400

This effect explains why people tend to recall incomplete tasks or goals more readily than those they have completed

What is the Zeigarnik effect?

400

This brain region, part of the reward system is heavily involved in addiction by reinforcing pleasurable behaviors through dopamine release

What is the nucleus accumbens? (events from it to the ventral segmental area is related to the experience of reward and pleasure)

500

What is Huntington's Disease?

Progressive motor disorder and is always associated with severe dementia. It is due to a dominant gene. Symptoms do not tend to appear until after peak reproductive years. 

500

This part of the brainstem is not only involved in motor control and sensory relay but also plays a key role in regulating REM sleep by sending signals that suppress voluntary muscle activity. 

Pons

500

This neurotransmitter is critical for synaptic plasticity and long-term potentiation (LTP), plays major role in learning and memory through its interaction with NMDA receptors in the hippocampus

What is glutamate?

500
This process describes the long-lasting strengthening of synaptic connections between neurons, believed to underlie learning & memory

What is long-term potentiation (LTP)?

500

During prolonged cocaine sprees, users may develop their rare condition characterized by tremors, nausea, hyperthermia, and psychotic symptom, often misdiagnosed as schizophrenia.

What is cocaine psychosis?