Title: Psychology: scientific study of behavior
1Introduction
2Psychology scientific study of behavior
- Neuroscience the scientific study of the nervous
system
3Biopsychology
- a branch of neuroscience that engages in the
scientific study of the biology of behavior-
composed of many subfields- this class will be an
introduction to these subfields
4Subfields
- Physiological psychology the study of the neuron
- Psychopharmacology the study of
neurotransmitters and drugs - Neuroanatomy the study of the structures that
make up the brain - Cognitive neuroscience study the neural basis of
cognition- higher intellectual processes such as
thoughts, memory, and attention
5A BRIEF HISTORY
6Philosophical Questions
- Nature vs. Nurture
- Biological processes determine who we are and how
we behave - Environmental processes determine who we are and
how we behave
7Modern View
- It is an interaction of both
- Another philosophical question is often referred
to as the Monism vs. Dualism question
82) Monism versus Dualism
- 1) physical matter, which behaves according to
the laws of nature and is thus, a suitable object
of scientific investigation - 2) the human mind, or soul, which lacks physical
substance, controls human behavior, and obeys no
natural laws
- Rene Descartes (1596-1650) Argued that the
universe was composed of two elements in a
position which became known as - Cartesian Dualism
9Monism
- Monism the belief that the universe consists of
only one kind of existence-a few forms of monism
exist
- Identity position the view that mental processes
are the same thing as certain kinds of brain
processes, but described in different terms.
10This course
- The description of the event (i.e. feeling of
fright) is the same thing as brain activity in
the Amygdala.
- The underlying theory of our discussion will be
monism, particularly the identity position, that
is, mental processes and behavior can be
attributed to patterns of behavior in your brain
11- Questions related specifically to Neuroscience
12 Localization versus Non-localization
13Localization Phrenology
Francis Gall
- Francis Gall Phrenology specific functions are
localized to discrete areas of the brain- the
brain is not a unitary organ but composed of 35
centers, or domains - Mental functions, even complex ones (love,
destructiveness), can be localized to these
centers- they develop and increase with size and
thus, those that would were most developed would
protrude through the scalp
14Localization
Paul Broca
- Karl Wernicke , a patient who suffered from
receptive aphasia. A lesion was found in the left
temporal lobe, an area which became known as
Wernickes Area and believed to be the center
responsible for receptive language - Pennfield Neurosurgeon who first used brain
stimulation on an awake human. stimulation of
particular areas of the brain led to various
functions (visual, speech, memory)
- Paul Broca, patient who suddenly developed
expressive aphasia. Upon autopsy, a lesion was
found in the left frontal lobe, an area which
became known as Brocas area and believed to be
the center responsible for expressive language
15Nonlocalization
- Flourens used the lesion technique to see how
the brain functioned experimented on a variety
of laboratory animals, removing more and more of
their brains
- what he found was that all functions grew
progressively weaker rather than selected
functions becoming specifically impaired
16Karl Lashley Mass Action
- attempted to locate the engram, or memory trace
in maze learning for rats. - He concluded that location of the lesion was not
important, but size (20 of the rats brain had
to be lesioned),
- Thus, he reasoned, mental functions were not
localized to specific groups of neurons but
distributed throughout the brain, a theory that
became known as Mass Action
17What is the current view?
- Integration of the two
- the elementary operations of the mind are
localized (i.e. expressive language, receptive
language) - the complex faculties (i.e. language) are the
result of parallel and serial connection of the
brain regions (systems)
18- In terms of an initial understanding of brain
functioning, it is easier to think in terms of
localization, but understand the limits
19What is the best Conceptual Modelof the Brain?
- The Brain as an Information Processor
20- Computer Information/Data (Input Mechanism) -gt
CPU (Processing) -gt Output Mechanism - Brain Information/Data from environment (senses)
-gt Brain (CPU) -gt Behavior (output mechanism)
21BIOLOGICAL THEORIES IMPORTANT TO UNDERSTANDING
THE BRAIN
- Evolution Charles Darwin (1859) On the Origin
of Species - Â
- Amassed a large body of evidence supporting the
notion that species evolve from preexisting
species
22- Evolution occurs through natural selection, where
those traits that are associated with higher
rates of survival, hence, reproduction, are the
most likely to be passed on to future generations - Â
- Implied a major role of genetics in the process
of evolution -
- Â
23- Evolution and the brain
- The idea of evolving from primitive to complex
applies in this area - the brains of many different species are more
similar than they are different - Â
24Genetics
- Gene DNA- protein synthesis- it builds us
physically - Genotype traits one can pass on to its
offspring through its genetic material - Phenotype an organisms observable traits
- Â Chromosomes threadlike structures in the
nucleus of each cell on which the genes are
located These occur in matched pairs and each
species has a characteristic number of pairs in
each of its body cells-humans have 23 pairs
25The Human Genome Project
- Â
- Estimates were we had 100,000 genes
- It was found we have somewhere between
19,000-22,000 - The majority of our DNA was called Junk at
least (2) roles which has revolutionized our
thinking
- 1) Contains the history of our evolution
Comparing our genome to different species - Mouse 90 the sam
- Chimp 98.75
- Intelligence, Language, Plasticity as a
focus of our differences - Humans 99.90
262) Mechanism by which genes are turned
on/activated, off/deactivated- appears
activity in the brain might drive this process!
i.e. stress may activate a gene that codes for
cell death, leading to loss of serotonin cells,
which leads to the correlation between less
serotonin as a theory of etiology of depression Â
27Polygenic Inheritance multiple genes are
involved- the challenges of gene therapy!