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The Localization of Function of the Brain

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THE LOCALIZATION OF FUNCTION OF THE BRAIN The IB syllabus says: Explain One Study Related to Localization of Function of the Brain) In IB speak – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Localization of Function of the Brain


1
The Localization of Function of the Brain
  • The IB syllabus says Explain One Study Related
    to Localization of Function of the Brain

)
In IB speak This means
2
The structure and function of the brain
  • The brain is the seat of awareness and reason,
    where learning, memory and awareness are centered
  • It decides whether decisions were right or wrong,
    and imagines how things might have turned out if
    we had acted differently
  • The crowning glory of millions of years of
    evolution as new structures evolve, older
    structures are retained.


3
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Brain Structures
  1. Hindbrain
  2. Midbrain
  3. Forebrain
  4. Cerebral Cortex (part or forebrain)

5
The Limbic System
6
Hindbrain
  • Structures on top of our spinal cord.
  • Controls basic biological structures.

The brain in purple makes up the hindbrain.
7
Medulla Oblongata
  • Located just above the spinal cord.
  • Involved in control of
  • blood pressure
  • heart rate
  • breathing.

8
Pons
  • Located just above the medulla.
  • Connects hindbrain with midbrain and forebrain.
  • Involved in facial expressions.

9
Cerebellum
  • Bottom rear of the brain.
  • Means little brain
  • Coordinates fine muscle movements.

10
Cerebellum
11
Midbrain
If stimulated
  • Coordinates simple movements with sensory
    information.
  • Most important structure in Midbrain is the
    Reticular Formation controls arousal and ability
    to focus our attention.

If Destroyed
12
Forebrain
  • What makes us human.
  • Largest part of the brain.
  • Made up of the Thalamus, Limbic System and
    Cerebral Cortex.

13
Thalamus
  • Switchboard of the brain.
  • Receives sensory signals from the spinal cord and
    sends them to other parts of the forebrain.
  • Every sense except smell.

14
The Limbic System
15
Hypothalamus
  • Maybe most important structure in the brain.
  • Controls and regulates
  • Body temperature
  • Sexual Arousal
  • Hunger
  • Thirst
  • Endocrine System

The most powerful structure in the brain.
16
Hippocampus
  • Involved in the processing and storage of
    memories.

17
Amygdala
  • Involved in how we process memory.
  • More involved in volatile emotions like anger.

The emotion of anger has not changed much
throughout evolution.
18
The Cerebral Cortex
  • Made up of densely packed neurons we call gray
    matter
  • Glial Cells support brain cells.
  • Wrinkles are called fissures.
  • If you lay brain out it would be as big as a
    large Pizza 2000 pizza.

19
The lobes of the cerebral cortex
  • Anatomy and function
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vHVGlfcP3ATI

20
The Cerebral Cortex is made up of four Lobes.
21
The Lobes of the Cerebral Cortex
  • The Occipital Lobe Receives and processes
    visual information. Damage to this area can
    produce blindness, even though the eyes and their
    neural connections to the brain are healthy and
    intact
  • The Temporal Lobe Plays an important role in
    complex visual tasks such as recognizing faces.
    Information is also processed from the ears and
    it contributes to balance and equilibrium and
    regulates emotions and motivations such as
    anxiety, pleasure and anger. The left temporal
    lobe is responsible for language and speech.
  • The Parietal Lobe receives sensory information
    from all over the body, from sense receptors in
    the skin (e.g. pain receptors), muscles, joints
    and taste buds.
  • The Frontal Lobe accounts for about half of the
    volume of the brain, and is the most mysterious
    part of the brain, it receives, integrates and
    processes information about what is going on in
    the other parts of the brain.
  • Its been called the executive control centre
    for the brain.
  • It is also involved in problem solving tasks.
  • The prefrontal cortex is involved in behaviors we
    associate with personality, such as motivation,
    persistence and character we know this from the
    case of Gage 1848.
  • Biopsychologists support this with research
    hundreds of years later- damage to this area
    leads to changes personality people who have
    this area damaged, tend to accumulate debts,
    betray their spouses, and abandon friends and
    lose their jobs.

22
Frontal Lobes
  • Abstract thought and emotional control.
  • Contains Motor Cortex sends signals to our body
    controlling muscle movements.
  • Contains Brocas Area responsible for
    controlling muscles that produce speech.
  • Damage to Brocas Area is called Brocas Aphasia
    unable to make movements to talk.

23
Parietal Lobes
  • Contain Sensory Cortex receives incoming touch
    sensations from rest of the body.
  • Most of the Parietal Lobes are made up of
    Association Areas.

Where would this girl feel the most pain from her
sunburn?
24
Occipital Lobes
  • Deals with vision.
  • Contains Visual Cortex interprets messages from
    our eyes into images we can understand.

25
Temporal Lobes
  • Process sound sensed by our ears.
  • Interpreted in Auditory Cortex.
  • NOT LATERALIZED.
  • Contains Wernike's Area interprets written and
    spoken speech.
  • Wernike's Aphasia unable to understand language
    the syntax and grammar jumbled.

26
Association Areas
  • Any area not associated with receiving sensory
    information or coordinating muscle movements.

27
Motor and Sensory Cortexes
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Specialization and Integration in Language
30
Brain Activity when Hearing, Seeing, and Speaking
Words
31
Link the following the correct areas of the brain

32
The Lobes of the Cerebral Cortex Questions
  • What are the functions of the Occipital Lobe?
    What does damage to this area result in?
  • What are the functions of the Temporal Lobe? What
    emotions does this area regulate?
  • What are the functions of The Parietal Lobe?
  • What are the functions of The Frontal Lobes?
  • What has the frontal lobe also been called?
  • What does the prefrontal cortex do? How do we
    know this?
  • How does damage to the prefrontal cortex
    influence a persons personality?

33
Looking at the brain..
  • Clive Wearing
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLu9UY8Zqg-Qfeature
    related
  • Mouse song
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLi5nMsXg1Lk
  • Rap
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vgWGpCstFn-c
  • Einsteins brain
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJNOKT-xv7Dw

34
Split Brain Studies and Hemispheric specialization
The IB syllabus says Explain One Study Related
to Localization of Function of the Brain
Gazzaniga (1984)
35
The Corpus Callosum
Divides the 2 hemispheres.
36
The localized functions of the two
cerebral hemispheres
Right
Left
37
? Each hemisphere responsible for the opposite
side of the body.
? Left hemisphere receives information from right
field of view and vice versa
? Work with split brain patients helped to
identify differences in function of the two
hemispheres of the brain.
? Hemispheric specialisation also linked with
handedness, in that right handed people have
a dominant left hemisphere and so on.
38
Hemispheres
  • Divided into to hemispheres.
  • Contralateral control right controls left and
    vice versa.
  • In general,
  • Left Hemisphere logic and sequential tasks.
  • Right Hemisphere spatial and creative tasks.

39
Split Brain Patients
40
Testing the Divided Brain
41
Hemispheric Specialization the whole mind
  • Our experience of the world, our thoughts and
    feelings seem unitary we have a single
    consciousness
  • The brain consists of two symmetrical halves or
    hemispheres and they are joined by the corpus
    callosum
  • Each hemisphere is responsible for the opposite
    side of the body
  • Therefore if consciousness is associated with the
    brain then the nature of experience and awareness
    is based on the integration of the two
    hemispheres

42
Roger Sperrys Gazzanigas Split Brain Research
  • In the 1950s Roger Sperry trialed split brain
    operations with monkeys and cats by cutting the
    corpus callosum
  • Cutting the corpus callosum seemed to show no
    major effects on behavior (but animals dont have
    language)
  • In 1953 one of Sperrys students Mayers invented
    the split brain procedure which lead to one of
    Sperrys most important findings

43
Roger Sperrys Gazzanigas Split Brain Research
  • In the 1950s Roger Sperry trialed split brain
    operations with monkeys and cats by cutting the
    corpus callosum
  • Cutting the corpus callosum seemed to show no
    major effects on behavior (but animals dont have
    language)
  • In 1953 one of Sperrys students Mayers invented
    the split brain procedure which lead to one of
    Sperrys most important findings

44
Roger Sperrys Roger Sperrys Gazzanigas Split
Brain Research
  • The Neurosurgeon Philip Vogel Pioneered a radical
    approach to the treating of severe cases of
    epilepsy (where anti-seizure drugs didnt work),
    by severing the corpus callosum.
  • Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder that
    is characterized by recurrent unprovoked
    seizures. These seizures are due to abnormal,
    excessive neuronal activity in the brain
  • Split brain surgery was carried out to reduce the
    risk accidental physical injury by reducing the
    severity and violence of epileptic seizures by
    stopping the seizures from spreading from one
    half of the brain to the other
  • The treatment worked, and patients seemed
    remarkably normal after the operation.

45
Summary reading on split brain experiments
46
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48
Roger Sperrys Split Brain Research
  • However, the patients studied by Sperry seemed to
    have two independent streams of consciousness
  • The appeared to have Two minds functioning
    separately from each other
  • Sperry (1968) reported
  • In other words, each hemisphere seems to have
    its own separate and private sensations its own
    perceptions its own concepts and its own
    impulses to act, with related volitional,
    cognitive and learning experiences

49
Visual information Is processed In the opposite
side Of the brain
creativity, imagination
Right Brain
Left Brain
50
Gazzaniga (1984) Split brain observations (A
natural experiment)
Activity See Video
  • Aim To investigate hemispheric specialization
    with split brain patients
  • Procedure The split brain patient Joe was
    asked to look at a screen with a dot in the
    middle of a computer screen and then name/draw
    the objects he saw as they flashed up on either
    side or both sides of the screen.
  • Findings
  • When Joe focuses on a point (right visual field)
    everything to the right of the point goes to
    his left brain, the area associated with language
    and speech When a word or picture is flashed on
    the right side, Joe is easily able to name it.
  • Information to the left of the point (left visual
    field) goes to the right hand side of his brain
    Joe is unable to name the object, but he is able
    to draw the object with his left hand (which is
    controlled by the right half of his brain)
  • Conclusions
  • The different hemispheres have separate functions
    (left - language/ right - spatial tasks) - The
    mind is made up of several independent agents and
    they can carry out activities outside of our
    conscious awareness, and they are integrated at
    one point, which Gazzaniga believes is the in the
    left hemisphere
  • Criticisms It was a natural experiment so there
    was a lack of control over variables the
    participants mental abilities may have been
    atypical before the operation. There are also
    theoretical problems more recent research has
    reveled differences between left and right handed
    people this research was carried out on a right
    handed participant.

51
Why are split brain studies so important?
  • They tell us about hemispheric specialization
    (the two hemispheres differ in their functions -
    there are localized functions to each hemisphere)
  • When the corpus callosum is severed each
    hemisphere is shown to process information
    without awareness of the other side
  • However, split brains are not totally split, and
    lower structures in the brain remain connected,
    such as the limbic system
  • Recent split brain operations only cut ¾ of the
    corpus callosum.

Ultimately the left brain tries to explain what
the right brain is doing
52
  • This research has given us a better understanding
    of how the hemisphere functions interact and
    helped those suffering from severe epilepsy, as
    well as the localized functions of each
    hemisphere
  • Gender differences
  • Evidence suggests that men and women's brains are
    organized and process information slightly
    differently
  • Women have a larger corpus callosum relative to
    the total brain size meaning better communication
    between the hemispheres
  • Women have a greater density of neurons in the
    temporal cortex and tend to be better at tasks
    involving language and speaking
  • Men tend to have superior abilities at spatial
    tasks (right brain)
  • (Glassman, 1998)
  • Cerebral dominance
  • There is a tenancy for one hemisphere to dominate
    are you a left brain or right brain type of
    person?

Evaluation
Why are split brain studies so important?
53
Split Brain Studies and consciousness
  • Consciousness awareness of mental events,
    thoughts, motives, perceptions and feeling,
  • These are available to consciousness based on
    where we focus our attention
  • Sperry and Gazzaniga Believe that consciousness
    is not localized, it is an emergent property
    (it emerges from the brain working as a whole. It
    is a synchronized activity across many areas of
    the brain)
  • The brain and nervous system work together in
    forming consciousness
  • Clear answers remain elusive are research
    continues

54
Task
  • Compete key study sheet on Gazzanigas research
  • Summarize what split brain research tells us
    about consciousness

55
Discussion points
  • What does hemispheric specialization mean?
  • Give examples of localized functions of the left
    and right brain
  • How does split brain research give us insight
    into the workings of the human brain
  • Describe the gender differences in brain
    structures
  • What does cerebral dominance mean?

56
Connecting research to the general learning
outcomes
  • For the Biological LOA, there are a number of
    general learning outcomes
  • It is important that you are able to match up
    what we have studied with these
  • The aim of this activity is to help you to meet
    these general learning outcomes

57
Brain Plasticity
  • The idea that the brain, when damaged, will
    attempt to find news ways to reroute messages.
  • Childrens brains are more plastic than adults.

58
The brain is hugely integrated
  • There are many different brain areas involved in
    abilities such as vision.
  • Maunsell Newsome(1987) proposed there were 19
    visual areas in macaque monkeys. Research needs
    to focus on how the different areas of the brain
    interact together.
  • Researchers such as Lashley (1929) believe in
    holism Lashley destroyed virtually all parts of
    rat brains in varying amounts to find the
    location of memory, he concluded that there was a
    law of mass action applied memory loss is
    related to the amount of damage inflicted on the
    rats brain, not the location of the damage.
  • We must consider the brain to be a very dynamic
    system

59
The Brain Shows Plasticity
  • The brain is very flexible and can physically
    adjust the location of function if brain damage
    occurs (e.g. children with damage to their left
    cerebral hemisphere are able to recover their
    language abilities)

60
Neural Plasticity
  • Neural plasticity is the ability of the brain to
    change structurally and chemically by experience.
  • Rosenzwigs (1984) experiment with rats showed
    that enriched environments larger neurons in
    the rats so the brain is organized as a result
    of experience.
  • Neurogensis is growth of new brain cells.

61
Localization is not always clear cut
  • Hemispheric asymmetry- there are many variations
    in localization of function between male and
    females and left and right handed participants.
    The findings of studies are usually based on
    right handed males (gender bias)
  • Male/ female brain
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vxxtUH_bHBxs

62
Rosenzweigs (1984) study of neural plasticity
  • Aim To examine the effect of environment on
    neuronal development
  • Procedure Laboratory experiment
  • IV environment of the rats (enriched/
    impoverished)
  • DV Neuronal development in post mortem
  • Findings Enriched environment larger neurons
    with more synaptic connections
  • Conclusion The environment can influence neurons
    neural plasticity
  • Criticisms Ethics? Does it apply to humans?

63
Activity complete a key study sheet on this study
64
Quick Quiz answer in pairs
  • Give three localized functions of brain
    structures
  • What were the aims, procedures and findings of
    Rosenzweigs (1984) study of neural plasticity?
  • Using research evidence to support your points,
    give three evaluative points that relate to
    localization of function (you can also bring in
    reductionism here)
  • What method did Sperry Gazzaniga use in their
    early research into hemispheric specialization
    with primates?
  • What method did Gazzaniga (1984) use to find out
    about the functions of the two hemispheres of the
    brain with Joe?
  • What were the findings of Gazzanigas split brain
    studies with Joe?

65
  • Explain One Study Related to Localization of
    Function of the Brain

66
An evaluation of localization of function
(neural plasticity)
67
Essential Questions
  • What are the localized functions of brain
    structures?
  • How can the principles that define the Biological
    LOA be demonstrated in research
  • How and why are particular research methods used
    in the biological LOA

68
General learning outcomes key study focus
workshop
  • We have looked at a number of studies from the
    biological level of analysis
  • Phineas Gage (Harlow, 1868) (case study
    qualitative)
  • Broca (1861) (case study/ observation -
    qualitative)
  • Gazzaniga (1984) (natural experiment -
    quantitative)
  • Rosenzweig (1984) (laboratory experiment -
    quantitative)
  • Look back at your notes (methodology/principles
    of the Bio LOA), and take notes on butcher paper
    on the following, each group will then present to
    the class
  • Explain how the principles of the biological
    level of analysis are demonstrated in that
    research
  • Explain research method used give reasons why
    the method was used
  • Evaluate that method (strengths weaknesses)
  • Discuss ethical considerations relating to the
    research

One scribe in each group should write this up
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