Title: Unit%203:%20Biological%20Psychology
1Unit 3 Biological Psychology
- Essential Task 3-5a.Describe the subdivisions and
functions of the Central Nervous System - A. Brain
- i. Brain Stem
- Medulla, Pons, Reticular Formation, Cerebellum,
and the Thalamus - ii. Limbic System
- Hypothalamus, Amygdala, and the Hippocampus
- iii. Cerebral Cortex (Left and Right Hemispheres
and the corpus callosum) - Occipital Lobe, Parietal Lobe, Temporal Lobe,
and the Frontal Lobe - Primary Motor Cortex and Primary Sensory Cortex
- Wernicke's Area and Broca's Area
- B. Spinal Cord
2We are here
3(No Transcript)
4Essential Task 3-5 CNS
Outline
- A. Brain
- i. Brain Stem
- Medulla, Pons, Reticular Formation, Cerebellum,
and the Thalamus - ii. Limbic System
- Hypothalamus, Amygdala, and the Hippocampus
- iii. Cerebral Cortex
- (Left and Right Hemispheres and the corpus
callosum) - Occipital Lobe, Parietal Lobe, Temporal Lobe,
and the Frontal Lobe Primary Motor Cortex and
Primary Sensory Cortex Wernicke's Area and
Broca's Area - B. Spinal Cord
5The Brain Stem (Automatic Functions)
Brain Structure Primary Function Secondary Function
Medulla Respiration, blood pressure, heart rate Vomiting
Pons Puts you to sleep
Reticular Formation Attention, regulates awareness
Cerebellum Balance and coordination
Thalamus Directs sensory information to the rest of the brain
6Older Brain Structures
- The Brainstem is the oldest part of the brain,
beginning where the spinal cord swells and enters
the skull. It is responsible for automatic
survival functions.
7Brain Stem
- The Medulla muh-DUL-uh is the base of the
brainstem - It controls autonomic functions and relays nerve
signals between the brain and spinal cord. - respiration
- blood pressure
- heart rate
- reflex arcs
- vomiting
8Brain Stem
- Pons and inside that the (Reticular Formation) is
a nerve network in the brainstem that plays an
important role in controlling arousal. - It is involved in motor control and sensory
analysis... for example, information from the ear
first enters the brain in the pons. It has parts
that are important for the level of consciousness
and for sleep. - The Reticular Formation controls
- Attention
- Cardiac Reflexes
- Motor Functions
- Regulates Awareness
- Relays Nerve Signals to the Cerebral Cortex
- Sleep
9Brain Stem
- The Medulla muh-DUL-uh is the base of the
brainstem that controls heartbeat and breathing. - Reticular Formation is a nerve network in the
brainstem that plays an important role in
controlling arousal.
10Brain Stem
- The Thalamus THAL-uh-muss is the brains
sensory switchboard, located on top of the
brainstem. It directs messages to the sensory
areas in the cortex and transmits replies to the
cerebellum and medulla.
11Cerebellum
- The little brain attached to the rear of the
brainstem. It helps coordinate voluntary
movements and balance.
12Limbic System (Emotion Center)
Brain Structure Primary Function Secondary Function
Hypothalamus Drives Hunger, Thirst, Sex Temperature control
Amygdala Fight or Flight
Hippocampus STM to LTM
13The Limbic System
- The Limbic System is a doughnut-shaped system of
neural structures at the border of the brainstem
and cerebrum, associated with emotions such as
fear, aggression and drives for food and sex. It
includes the hippocampus, amygdala, and
hypothalamus.
14Amygdala
- The Amygdala ah-MIG-dah-la consists of two
almond-shaped neural clusters linked to the
emotions of fear and anger.
15Hypothalamus
- The Hypothalamus lies below (hypo) the thalamus.
It directs several maintenance activities like
eating, drinking, body temperature, and control
of emotions. It helps govern the endocrine system
via the pituitary gland.
16Reward Center
- Rats cross an electrified grid for
self-stimulation when electrodes are placed in
the reward (hypothalamus) center (top picture).
When the limbic system is manipulated, a rat will
navigate fields or climb up a tree (bottom
picture).
Sanjiv Talwar, SUNY Downstate
17Cerebral Cortex
Brain Structure Primary Function Secondary Function
Occipital Lobe Visual Processing
Parietal Lobe Spatial Reasoning
Frontal Lobe Decision Making
Temporal Lobe Auditory sensory information
Motor Cortex Movement
Sensory Cortex Sensation
Wernickes Area Understanding Speech
Brocas Area Producing Speech
18The Cerebral Cortex
- The intricate fabric of interconnected neural
cells that covers the cerebral hemispheres. It is
the bodys ultimate control and information
processing center.
19Structure of the Cortex
- Each brain hemisphere is divided into four lobes
that are separated by prominent fissures. These
lobes are the frontal lobe (forehead), parietal
lobe (top to rear head), occipital lobe (back
head) and temporal lobe (side of head).
20Functions of the Cortex
- The Motor Cortex is the area at the rear of the
frontal lobes that control voluntary movements.
The Sensory Cortex (parietal cortex) receives
information from skin surface and sense organs.
21Visual Function
- The functional MRI scan shows the visual cortex
is active as the subject looks at faces.
22Auditory Function
- The functional MRI scan shows the auditory cortex
is active in patients who hallucinate.
23Association Areas
- More intelligent animals have increased
uncommitted or association areas of the cortex.
24Language
Aphasia is an impairment of language, usually
caused by left hemisphere damage either to
Brocas area (impaired speaking) or to Wernickes
area (impaired understanding).
25Specialization Integration
- Brain activity when hearing, seeing, and speaking
words
26Can you make a purple circle with a cross in the
middle?
27Fun with your Hemispheres
- Rotate your dominant hand in one direction while
at the same time rotating the opposite foot in
the other direction. - No problem since controlled by two hemispheres
- Now, rotate your dominant hand in one direction
while at the same time rotating the foot on the
same side in the other direction.
28Our Divided Brain
- Our brain is divided into two hemispheres.
- The left hemisphere processes reading, writing,
speaking, mathematics, and comprehension skills.
In the 1960s, it was termed as the dominant brain.
29Hemispheric Specialization
- Corpus Callosum
- Fibers that connect the two hemispheres
- Allow close communication between left and right
hemisphere - Each hemisphere appears to specialize in certain
functions - (See Worksheet)
30The Wagner Preference Inventory
- (a) left, logical
- (b) left, verbal
- (c) right, manipulative/spatial
- (d) right, creative
31Hemispheric Specialization
People with intact brains also show left-right
hemispheric differences in mental abilities. A
number of brain scan studies show normal
individuals engage their right brain when
completing a perceptual task and their left brain
when carrying out a linguistic task.
32Splitting the Brain
- A procedure in which the two hemispheres of the
brain are isolated by cutting the connecting
fibers (mainly those of the corpus callosum)
between them.
Corpus Callosum
33Split Brain Patients
- With the corpus callosum severed, objects (apple)
presented in the right visual field can be named.
Objects (pencil) in the left visual field cannot.
34Divided Consciousness
35The Spinal Cord
- Complex cable of nerves that connects brain to
rest of the body - Carries motor impulses from the brain to internal
organs and muscles - Carries sensory information from extremities and
internal organs to the brain - 400,000 people a year in US either partial or
complete paralysis.
36The Spinal Cord
- The spinal cord controls some protective reflex
movements without any input from the brain