Title: 345: Human Neuropsychology
1345 Human Neuropsychology
- Professor Patricia Reuter-Lorenz
- GSIs
- David Fencsik
- Joseph Mikels
2Cognitive Neuroscience
- BASIC GOALs
- How does brain mediate cognition?
- Develop models of cognition
- Relate structures to functions
Behavior/Cognition
Computation
Neuroscience
3Cognitive Neuroscience
- BASIC GOALs
- How does brain mediate cognition?
- Develop models of cognition
- Relate structures to functions
Behavior/Cognition
- Neuropsychology
- Electrophysiology
- Brain Imaging
- Animal Electrophys.
Computation
Neuroscience
4Why Study the Brain to Understand Normal
Cognition?
- Learn about mental life (cognition) by studying
its seat - The mind is what the brain does!
- Learn about how a thing works by studying
- how its built
- how it functions
- how it breaks down
- Constraints
- disprove theories of cognition
- guide new ones
5Cognitive Neuroscience and Converging Methods
- Traditional Neuropsychology
- Studies of focal brain damage or degenerative
disease - Behavioral studies of neurologically intact
humans (e.g., visual and auditory laterality
studies ) - Human Electrophysiology
- Electroencephalography
- Event Related Potentials
- Neuroimaging
- Positron Emission Tomography
- Functional MRI
6Historical Roots in 19th Century Phrenology
- Brain is the organ of mind
- composite of parts, with specific faculties
- Area size indicates strength of faculty
- Size evident in skull (bumps, prominences,
depressions) - Gall and Spurzheim
7Traits include
- love for one's offspring
- cleverness, know-how
- vanity, love of glory
- memory for people
- memory of things facts
- sense of color, pictorial talent
- Love of God and religion
8- Opposition to Phrenology
- Anti-localizationists brain functions as an
indivisible unit (e.g. Flourens) - Anti-materialists mental/spiritual faculties are
not of organic matter - Important Issues Underscored
- How to define a faculty?
- What is localized?
- Which anatomical map?
9Mid-late 19th century
- Paul Brocas Tan (1861)
- speech loss not due to paralysis
- "loss of memory of movements needed to pronounce
words" - 3rd frontal convolution in LEFT Hemisphere
- Carl Wernicke (1874)
- cases of lost speech comprehension
- localized to temporal lobe of Left Hemisphere.
10Implications of Broca's and Wernicke's discoveries
- Localization of higher mental functions
- Shift towards "physiologically" real functions
(motor vs. sensory) - Notion of Cerebral dominance
11- In any well-made machine one is ignorant of the
working of most of the parts -- the better they
work the less we are conscious of them... it is
only a fault which draws our attention to the
existence of a mechanism at all. - Kenneth Craik, The Nature of Explanation (1943)
12Mental Life is Seamless...
- Analysis of Cognitive Deficit is like a PRISM
- revealing the components of mental life that
would be otherwise invisible - just as a prism reveals the spectrum of
wavelengths comprising white light
13Aims of Experimental Cognitive Neuropsychology
- Explain patterns of impaired and intact
performance in terms of normal cognitive
psychology - Use cognitive theories to explain dysfunction
- Use cognitive/experimental methods to analyze
effects of damage - Understand normal cognition by studying the
effects of brain damage - Identify the subsystems and special purpose
modules that control normal cognition
14Cognitive neuropsychology methods link mental
processes to brain structures
- Step 1 Identify structural dysfunction
- Diffuse disease/degeneration (Alzheimers
Disease Parkinsons) - - Identify spared vs. impaired neural systems
- Focal lesion analysis in humans
- - Structural imaging (CT or MRI scans) localize
damage
15Cognitive neuropsychology methods link mental
processes to brain structures
- Step 2 Identify impaired vs. spared functions
- Use cognitive/experimental methods to analyze
cognitive consequences of damage - Use cognitive theories to explain patterns of
impaired and intact performance - Identify the subsystems and special purpose
modules that control normal cognition
16Aims of Clinical Neuropsychology
- diagnosis of deficit
- acute treatment and rehabilitation
- long-term management
17Discussion Sections Meet this week
- NOTE ROOMS!!
- 002 W DIS W 4-6PM B247E H
- 003 W DIS W 4-6PM B242 E H
- 004 W DIS F 10-12 B247 E H
- 005 W DIS F 10-12 B261 E H
18Syllabus highlights
- http//www.umich.edu/psycours/345
- Requirements and Grading
- One 2-hour lecture and one 2-hour discussion
period per week. - Exams 72 of grade is based on 2 quizzes and 2
exams. - Quizzes, in-class, worth 12 each.
- midterm final exam each worth 24 covering the
material from the preceding half of the course. - Discussion Sections Participation in discussion
sections and performance on discussion section
assignments contributes 28 of your final grade.
- Missed Exams Feedback
- Texts
- Cognitive Neuroscience The Biology of the Mind
by M.S, Gazzaniga, R.B. Ivry, G.R. Mangun
(Norton, 1998). - Fractured Minds by Jenni A. Ogden (Oxford, 1996)
19Lecture Topics and Readings
- WEEK /DATE Topic Reading (Cognitive
Neuroscience) - 1 1/5 Overview /History of Neuropsychology
Ch. 1 - Cognitive Neuroscience
- 2 1/12 Human Neuroanatomy Methods for
Localizing Ch. 2 3 - Cognitive Functions
- 3 1/19 Maps in the Brain Ch. 3 4
- 4 1/26 Disorders of Perception Ch. 4
- 5 2/2 Quiz 1
- Object processing and its dysfunction I Ch.
5 - 6 2/9 Object processing and its dysfunction
II Ch. 5 - 7 2/16 Visual Attention and its deficits I Ch.
6 - 8 2/23 Visual Attention and its deficits II Ch.
6 - MIDTERM EXAM W 2/23 800- 1000 PM Location
TBA - SPRING BREAK Feb26-MAR. 5
20- 9 3/8 The Split-Brain Syndrome Ch. 9
- 10 3/15 Hemispheric Asymmetry in the Normal
Brain Ch. 9 - 11 3/22 The Neurological Basis of Language
Ch. 8 - 12 3/29 Quiz 2
- Functions of the Frontal Lobes I Ch. 11
- 13 4/5 Functions of the Frontal Lobes II Ch.
11 - 14 4/12 Memory and its dysfunction Ch. 7
- FINAL EXAM W 4/19 TBA PM Location
TBA