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Chapter 4: Physical Development: Body, Brain, and Perception

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Chapter 4: Physical Development: Body, Brain, and Perception Development of the Brain and Nervous System By Kati Tumaneng (for Drs. Cook & Cook) Development of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 4: Physical Development: Body, Brain, and Perception


1
Chapter 4 Physical Development Body, Brain, and
Perception
  • Development of the Brain and Nervous System

By Kati Tumaneng (for Drs. Cook Cook)
2
Development of the Brain and Nervous System
  • Brain is one of the first structures to form when
    tissue differentiation begins in embryo.
  • At birth, the brain and head are more than a half
    their adult size. Newborn head is 1/4 of total
    length compare to adult head is 1/8 of height.
  • Brain Development http//faculty.washington.edu/c
    hudler/dev.html

3
Development of the Brain and Nervous System
4
Structure of the Brain and Nervous System
5
Structure of the Brain and Nervous System
  • Spinal Cord Information superhighway
  • Brain Stem Controls automatic functions
    regulates alertness
  • Cerebellum Controls posture, body orientation,
    and complex muscle movements
  • Cerebral Cortex Grey matter on the top of the
    brain, divided into 4 major lobes (frontal,
    temporal, parietal, and occipital)
  • Motor Area Controls voluntary muscle movements
  • Somatosensory Area Registers sensory input from
    all areas of the body

6
Structure of the Brain and Nervous System
  • Wernickes Area Speech input
  • Brocas Area Organizes articulation for speech
    output
  • Visual Area Visual processing
  • Frontal Lobe Involved in organizing, planning,
    and other executive functions important for
    higher-level thinking, problem solving, and
    creativity
  • Neurons Specialized cells that process
    information and allow communication in the
    nervous system

7
Forming the Brain and Nervous System
  • Weeks 4 (after conception) Embryo folds over to
    form a neural tube, precursor of central nervous
    system (brain and spinal cord)
  • Week 7 Neurons form at neural tube
  • Week 10 Neurons begin migrating to the top of
    the tube forms first layer of cortex with five
    more to follow
  • Production of neurons peaks at 250,000 per minute
  • Week 20 Cortex has 80 billion neurons, which is
    nearly full complement axons and dendrites have
    begun growing

8
Forming the Brain and Nervous System
  • Week 23 First synapses form, and focus now
    shifts to growth of connections
  • Most synapses will form after birth,
    corresponding to growth spurts in brain
  • Week 31 Cerebral cortex grown enough so that
    can begin folding inside the skull
  • Brain weight increases 30 between 3 and 18
    months after birth, 10 between years 2-4, 6-8,
    10-12, and 14-16 with gender differences

9
Forming the Brain and Nervous System
  • Glial Cells Specialized cells in the nervous
    system that support neurons in several ways.
  • Synaptogenesis Form of neuron maturation where
    dendrites and axons branch out to form an
    enormously large number of connections with
    neighboring neurons.
  • Myelination A form of neuron maturation where
    the fatty insulation grows around axons.
  • Synaptic Pruning Process where unused synapses
    are lost.
  • Programmed Cell Death Process where many
    neurons die during periods of migration and heavy
    synaptogenesis.

10
Parts of a Neuron
11
The Role of Experience in Brain Development
  • Experience-expectant development Development of
    universal experiences and activities (such as
    hand-eye coordination), where excess synapses
    form and are then pruned according to experience.
  • vs.
  • Experience-dependent development Development of
    specific experiences and activities (such as
    riding a skateboard), where new synapses form to
    code the experience.

12
The Role of Experience in Brain Development
  • Synaptic Pruning is important to cut down on the
    noise to the neural circuits that leads to
    ineffective processing in the brain (e.g., mental
    retardation associated with fragile-X syndrome).
  • Exposure to stimulating environments is important
    for forming sophisticated neural networks in the
    young brain.
  • Mozart effect
  • http//www.mozarteffect.com/

13
Synaptogenesis and Synaptic Pruning
14
Neural Plasticity and Sensitive Periods
  • Plasticity Brains tendency to remain somewhat
    flexible or malleable until synaptogenesis is
    complete and until the brains synapses have been
    pruned and locked into serving particular
    functions.
  • Greatest before age 2, period when new synapses
    are still proliferating and have not yet been
    pruned
  • Age 2 to adolescence Plasticity declines

15
Larger Developmental Patterns in the Brain
  • Visual areas peak in synapse density within four
    months after birth, decreases to adult levels by
    age 10
  • Heavy growth in frontal lobes seen between 3 and
    6 years responsible for organizing and planning
    behavior
  • Between 6 and 13 years, highest growth rate seen
    in temporal and parietal lobes

16
What Does the Future Hold?
  • With advances in technologies used to scan the
    brain and measure brain activity and an increased
    understanding of genetics and cell behavior, may
    soon be able to track true origins of disorders
    and possibly treat them before they develop.

17
  • Picture on Slide 2 from http//www.brainconnecti
    on.com/topics?mainfa/child-brain, retrieved
    December 6, 2005.
  • Chart on Slide 3 from Cook, J. L., Cook, G.
    (2005). Child development Principles and
    perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 146). Boston Allyn
    and Bacon.
  • Brain on Slide 4 from Cook, J. L., Cook, G.
    (2005). Child development Principles and
    perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 147). Boston Allyn
    and Bacon.
  • Diagram of Neuron on Slide 10 from Cook, J. L.,
    Cook, G. (2005). Child development Principles
    and perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 148). Boston
    Allyn and Bacon.
  • Chart on Slide 13 from Cook, J. L., Cook, G.
    (2005). Child development Principles and
    perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 150). Boston Allyn
    and Bacon.
  • All other images retrieved from Microsoft
    PowerPoint Clip Art.
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