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Neurons, Hormones, and the Brain

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Title: Neurons, Hormones, and the Brain


1
Neurons, Hormones, and the Brain
chapter 4
2
Overview
chapter 4
  • The nervous system
  • Communication in the nervous system
  • Mapping the brain
  • A tour through the brain
  • The two hemispheres of the brain
  • Two stubborn issues in brain research

3
The central nervous system
chapter 4
  • Brain
  • Spinal cord
  • A collection of neurons and supportive tissue
    running from the base of the brain down the
    center of the back
  • Protected by spinal column

4
Organization of the nervous system
chapter 4
5
Structure of a neuron
chapter 4
  • Dendrites
  • Receive information from other neurons and
    transmit toward the cell body
  • Cell body
  • Keeps the neuron alive and determines whether it
    will fire
  • Axon
  • Extending fiber that conducts impulses away from
    the cell body and transmits to other cells.

6
Your turn
chapter 4
  • Which part of a neuron is tree-like or branchy?
  • 1. Dendrites
  • 2. The axon
  • 3. The cell body
  • 4. The nucleus

7
Your turn
chapter 4
  • Which part of a neuron is tree-like or branchy?
  • 1. Dendrites
  • 2. The axon
  • 3. The cell body
  • 4. The nucleus

8
Neurons in the news
chapter 4
  • Neural regeneration
  • The ability of neurons to grow back after injury
    or damage
  • Stem cells
  • Immature cells that renew themselves and have the
    potential to develop into mature cells

9
How neurons communicate
chapter 4
  • Axon terminals release neurotransmitter.
  • Neurotransmitter enters synapse.
  • Neurotransmitter binds to receptors that it fits.

10
Action potential
chapter 4
  • A brief change in electrical voltage that occurs
    between the inside and outside of an axon when a
    neuron is stimulated.

11
Neurotransmitter
chapter 4
  • Chemical released by a transmitting neuron at the
    synapse and capable of affecting the activity of
    a receiving neuron

12
Major neurotransmitters
chapter 4
  • Serotonin
  • Dopamine
  • Acetylcholine (Ach)
  • Norepinephrine
  • Gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA)
  • Glutamate
  • Endorphins

13
The endocrine system
chapter 4
  • Endocrine glands release hormones into the
    bloodstream

Hormones regulate growth, metabolism, sexual
development and behavior, and other functions.
14
The endocrine system
15
Hormones
chapter 4
  • Melatonin
  • Regulates daily biological rhythms
  • Oxycotin
  • Enhances uterine contractions during labor
  • Adrenal hormones
  • Involved in emotions and stress
  • Cortisol, epinephrine, and norepinephrine
  • Sex hormones
  • Regulate development and functioning of
    reproductive organs
  • Androgens, estrogens, and progesterone

16
Electroencephalogram
chapter 4
  • A recording of neural activity detected by
    electrodes

17
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
chapter 4
  • Involves delivering a large current through a
    wire coil on a persons head
  • Can be used to
  • Produce motor responses
  • Temporarily inactivate an area of the brain
  • Treat depression

18
Positron emission tomography
chapter 4
A method for analyzing biochemical activity in
the brain, using injections of a glucose-like
substance containing a radioactive element
  • Active areas have increased blood flow.
  • Sensors detect radioactivity.
  • Different tasks show distinct activity patterns.

19
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
chapter 4
Method for studying body and brain tissue
  • Magnetic fields align certain ions and compounds.
  • When field is removed, these molecules release
    energy as radio waves.
  • Computer calculates tissue density from radio
    waves.
  • Provides clear 3D images

20
A tour through the brain
chapter 4
  • Brain stem
  • Cerebellum
  • Thalamus
  • Hypothalamus and pituitary gland
  • Amygdala
  • Hippocampus
  • Cerebrum and cerebral lobes

21
The brain stem
chapter 4
  • Pons
  • Involved in sleeping, waking, and dreaming
  • Medulla
  • Responsible for certain automatic functions such
    as breathing and heart rate
  • Reticular activating system
  • Arouses cortex and screens incoming information

22
The cerebellum
chapter 4
  • Regulates movement and balance
  • Involved in remembering simple skills and
    acquired reflexes
  • Plays a part in
  • Analyzing sensory information
  • Solving problems
  • Understanding words

23
The thalamus
chapter 4
  • Relays sensory messages to the cerebral cortex
  • Includes all sensory messages except those from
    olfactory bulb

24
Hypothalamus and pituitary gland
chapter 4
  • Involved in emotions and drives vital to survival
  • Fear, hunger, thirst, and reproduction
  • Regulates autonomic nervous system
  • Pituitary gland
  • Small endocrine gland which releases hormones and
    regulates other endocrine glands

25
The amygdala
chapter 4
  • Responsible for
  • Arousal
  • Regulation of emotion
  • Initial emotional response to sensory information
  • Plays important role in
  • Mediating anxiety and depression
  • Emotional memory

26
The hippocampus
chapter 4
  • Responsible for
  • Storage of new information in memory
  • Comparing sensory information with what the brain
    expects about the world
  • Enabling us to form spatial memories for
    navigating the environment

27
The cerebrum
chapter 4
  • Largest brain structure
  • Two cerebral hemispheres connected by the corpus
    callosum.
  • In charge of most sensory, motor, and cognitive
    processes
  • Surrounded by cerebral cortex, a collection of
    several thin layers of cells (gray matter)

28
Lobes of the cerebral cortex
chapter 4
  • Occipital lobes (visual cortex)
  • Parietal lobes (somatosensory cortex)
  • Temporal lobes
  • Memory, perception, emotion, and auditory cortex
  • Left lobe Wernickes area
  • Frontal lobes
  • Emotion, planning, creative thinking, and motor
    cortex
  • Left lobe Brocas area

29
Lobes of the cerebral cortex
chapter 4
30
Your turn
chapter 4
  • Jenny bumps her head and is suddenly unable to
    see, although the doctor says there is nothing
    wrong with her eyes? Which part of her brain did
    Jenny damage?
  • 1. The amygdala
  • 2. The hippocampus
  • 3. The occipital lobe of the cerebral cortex
  • 4. The parietal lobe of the cerebral cortex

31
Your turn
chapter 4
  • Jenny bumps her head and is suddenly unable to
    see, although the doctor says there is nothing
    wrong with her eyes? Which part of her brain did
    Jenny damage?
  • 1. The amygdala
  • 2. The hippocampus
  • 3. The occipital lobe of the cerebral cortex
  • 4. The parietal lobe of the cerebral cortex

32
Phineas Gage
chapter 4
  • Gage was a railroad construction foreman
  • An 1848 explosion forced a steel tamping rod
    through his head
  • Others said he was no longer Gage
  • Lost his job, worked as a sideshow exhibit

33
The corpus callosum
chapter 4
  • Millions of myelinated axons connecting the
    brains hemispheres
  • Provides a pathway for communication
  • If surgically severed to treat epilepsy,
    hemispheres cannot communicate directly

34
Split-brain experiment
chapter 4
35
Split-brain experiment
chapter 4
  • Subjects were presented information to one or the
    other side of their brains.
  • Patients identified verbally the pictures to the
    right (e.g., boy).
  • When patients were asked to point to the face
    seen, the patients pointed to the left picture.

36
Allies or opposites?
chapter 4
  • Research on split-brain patients shows us. . .

Nearly all right-handed and the majority of
left-handed individuals process language mainly
in the left hemisphere. Many researchers believe
in left-hemisphere dominance. Others insist
right-hemisphere is important for spatial visual
problem solving, comprehending non-verbal sounds,
and some language abilities.
37
Where is the Self?
chapter 4
  • Modern brain scientists explain the mind or soul
    in physical terms as a product of the cerebral
    cortex.
  • Mind is a series of independent brain parts
    dealing with different aspects of thoughts
    (Dennett 1991).
  • Mind is a loose confederation of mental systems
    all working without conscious awareness
    (Gazzaniga, 1998 Roser Gazzaniga, 2004).
  • Frontal lobes may play a critical role.
  • Many still question the relationship between
    subjective experience and physical processes of
    the brain.

38
His and her brains?
chapter 4
  • After analyzing 49 studies of sex differences in
    brain anatomy, researchers found small
    differences between the two groups and larger
    differences within groups.
  • There do appear to be sex differences in
    lateralization of language.
  • Males show left hemisphere activation only.
  • Females show left and right hemisphere
    activation.
  • Females have more gray matter.

39
What do differences mean for behavior?
chapter 4
  • Supposed differences are stereotypes.
  • Brain difference does not necessarily explain
    behavior or performance.
  • Sex differences in the brain could be the result
    rather than the cause of behavioral differences.
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