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REVIEW FOR EXAM 1

     Prof. Bauchner
  Psych 180, Section 1
  September 24, 2012
The Neuron




http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/chmodel.html
Parts Of The Neuron
• Cell Body (Soma): contains the nucleus of the neuron
  which contains DNA and other organelles
• Axon: Takes information AWAY from the cell body
• Dendrites: Take information TO cell body (SIGNAL
  RECEIVERS)
• Myelin: Insulating fatty layer that SPEEDS UP signal
  transmission. Breaks of myelin are called Nodes of
  Ranvier
• Presynaptic Terminal: The region of the neuron
  conducting signals towards the synapse (contains the
  NTs).
3 Types of Neurons
• SENSORY: allow you to receive information
  from the outside world via your senses (taste
  food, hear a drum)
• MOTOR : permit communication with muscle
  fibers to allow you to move your body
  (contract or relax a muscle)
• INTERNEURONS: majority of neurons in your
  brain…involved in
  thinking, remembering, logic
What is a neurotransmitter?
• A messenger of neurological information
  that travels from one cell to another




    WHAT KIND OF NEUROLOGICAL INFO?
Types of NTs
• Acetylcholine: MUSCLE ACTION, LEARNING
  AND MEMORY
• Dopamine:
  MOVEMENT, LEARNING, ATTENTION, EMOTI
  ON
• Serotonin: MOOD, HUNGER, SLEEP
• Norepinephrine: ALERTNESS, AROUSAL
WHAT IS CNS?
• CENTRAL NERVOUS SYTEM
  – BRAIN
  – SPINAL CORD
LOBES OF THE BRAIN




 http://www.paulnussbaum.com/
FRONTAL LOBE
Organization
Concept Formation
Mental Flexibility
Personality
Execution of behavior (Frontal Lobe is referred to as Executive
System)
Abstract Reasoning
Problem Solving
Planning
Judgment
Ethical Behavior
Inhibition
Expressive Language
Affect
Attention
TEMPORAL LOBE
• Memory and new learning
  Language comprehension
  Auditory processing
  Spatial processing
  Attention
  Emotion
PARIETAL LOBE
Reading
Calculation
Attention
Short Term Memory
Cross Modal Processing (e.g.
listening, writing, reading notes)
Spatial navigation
Visual perception and discrimination
OCCIPITAL LOBE
Visual Processing
Visually Perceive
Visual Discrimination
Visual Spatial Skill
Facial Discrimination
STROOP TASK


BLUE   YELLOW   RED   ORANGE   PINK
CLASS QUESTION #1 !!
• Which lobe of the brain are we
  predominantly using when we attempt the
  Stroop Task?

A)   Frontal
B)   Temporal
C)   Parietal
D)   Occipital
CLASS QUESTION #1 !!
• Which lobe of the brain are we
  predominantly using when we attempt the
  Stroop Task?

A)   FRONTAL
B)   Temporal
C)   Parietal
D)   Occipital
Cerebellum
BALANCE, COORDINATION
LIMBIC SYSTEM : THE EMOTION
CENTER OF THE HUMAN BRAIN
AMYGDALA- FEAR/SURPRISE
HIPPOCAMPUS- SPATIAL NAVIGATION
CINGULATE GYRUS- HEART RATE, BLOOD PRESSURE
HYPOTHALAMUS - HUNGER, THIRST, SLEEP CYCLE, SEXUAL AROUSAL
THALAMUS
THE BRAIN IS PLASTIC?
Navigation-related structural change in
           the hippocampi of taxi drivers
             EA Maguire, DG Gadian, IS Johnsrude, CD Good, J Ashburner, RSJ
                 Frackowiak, and CD Frith. 2000. PNAS 97(8):4398-4403.




Shenet.org                            i240.photobucket.com
The Hippocampus
• Brain structure which lies under the medial
  temporal lobe
• LTM
• Spatial Navigation
• Part of Limbic System- EMOTION
  (hypothalamus, amygdala, pituitary)



                 http://ahsmail.uwaterloo.ca/kin356/ltm/images/amygdala_hippocam
                 pus_lateral_large.jpg
Plasticity of Hippocampus
• ↑ Volume relative to brain and body size
  when small animals engage in behavior
  requiring spatial memory (food storage)
• ↑ Volume during SEASONAL CHANGES when
  spatial ability is at a maximum (Lee et al., 1998)
• ↑ Volume has been noted in studies with
  musicians vs. nonmusicians (Schlaug et al., 1995)
Cells of the Nervous System
                            Five Types of Glial Cells

• Ependymal Cells
   – Small, ovoid; found in the walls of the ventricles
   – Make and secrete cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)


• Hydrocephalus
   – Build-up of pressure in the brain and swelling of the
     head caused if the flow of CSF is blocked
   – Can result in retardation
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Alcohol as a Teratogen
• Teratogen- a drug or other substance capable of
  interfering with the development of a fetus, causing
  birth defects




                                      Nlm.nih.gov
Statistics on FAS
• Overall incidence (annual) of Fetal alcohol
  syndrome: 0.9 per 10,000 births
• Caucasians .9
• Asians 0.3
• Hispanics 0.8
• African Americans 6.0
• Native Americans 29.9 (NWHIC)
Brain Imaging of FAS

BRAIN OF BABY
                                                                                     BRAIN OF BABY WIT
WITH NO
                                                                                     HEAVY PRENATAL
EXPOSURE TO
                                                                                     EXPOSURE TO
ALCOHOL
                                                                                     ALCOHOL




                                     Photo courtesy of Sterling Clarren, MD




                Areas that might be affected by alcohol exposure depend on WHICH AREAS
                ARE DEVELOPING AT THE TIME the alcohol is consumed. Since the brain and
                the central nervous system are developing throughout the entire
                pregnancy, the baby's brain is always vulnerable to damage from alcohol
                exposure.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
• Specific pattern of FACIAL FEATURES
• CNS Dysfunction
• Pre/post natal growth deficiency




                                  Photo by T Kellerman
Distinctive FAS Facial Features:
        Human/Mouse
Areas of Brain That Can Be Damaged in Utero
     By Maternal Alcohol Consumption
Agenesis of Corpus Callosum



CONTROL BRAIN
                                                  FAS in 9-year old girl




    Mattson, et al., 1994; Mattson & Riley, 1995; Riley et al., 1995
Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction
  to Brain and Behavior, Third
       Edition - Chapter 3
Cells of the Nervous System
                            Five Types of Glial Cells
• Astrocyte
   – Star shaped, symmetrical
   – Structural support for neurons
   – Transports substances between neurons and
     capillaries (blood-brain barrier)
   – Scar tissue formation
   – Enhance brain activity by providing fuel to active
     brain regions



Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction
  to Brain and Behavior, Third
       Edition - Chapter 3
Cells of the Nervous System
                            Five Types of Glial Cells
• Microglia
   – Originate in the blood as offshoot of immune system
   – Phagocytosis: scavenge debris (e.g., dead cells)

• Oligodendroglia Cell
   – Glial cell in the central nervous system that
     myelinates axons
   – Myelin
         • Glial coating that surrounds axons

Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Cells of the Nervous System
                Five Types of Glial Cells

• Schwann Cell
  – Glial cell in the peripheral nervous system that
    myelinates axons


• Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
  – Nervous system disorder that results from the loss of
    myelin around axons
Cells of the Nervous System
                            Five Types of Glial Cells
• Paralysis
   – Loss of sensation and movement due to nervous
     system injury
• Peripheral Nervous System
   – Microglia and Schwann cells help repair neurons
• Central Nervous System
   – Repair does not take place, regrowth may even be
     inhibited

Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction
  to Brain and Behavior, Third
       Edition - Chapter 3
Electrical Activity of a Membrane
                            Resting Potential

• Resting Potential
      – Electrical charge across the cell membrane in the
        absence of stimulation
      – A store of negative energy on the intracellular
        side relative to the extracellular side
      – Approximately -70 mV


Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Electrical Activity of a Membrane
                            Resting Potential

• Four charged particles take part in producing
  the resting potential
      – Sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-)
           • Higher concentration outside cell


      – Potassium (K+) and large proteins (A-)
           • Higher concentration inside cell

Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Electrical Activity of a Membrane
                             Resting Potential

• Maintaining the Resting Potential
     – Large A- molecules cannot leave cell: make inside
       negative
     – Ungated channels allow K+ and Cl- to move into
       and out of cell more freely, but gated sodium
       channels keep out Na+ ions
     – Na+-K+ pumps extrude Na+ from intracellular fluid
       and inject K+
 Kolb & Whishaw, An
 Introduction to Brain and
 Behavior, Third Edition -
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Electrical Activity of a Membrane Graded
                            Potentials
• Hyperpolarization
    – Increase in electrical charge across a membrane (more
      negative)
    – Usually due to the inward flow of chloride ions or
      outward flow of potassium ions
    – Tetraethylammonium (TEA)
• Depolarization
    – Decrease in electrical charge across a membrane (more
      positive)
    – Usually due to the inward flow of sodium
    – Tetrodotoxin
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
• Neurotransmitters - chemical substance released from the end of a
  neuron during the propagation of a nerve impulse; it relays
  information from one neuron to another.

• Neuromodulators – secreted in larger amounts and diffuse further
  (composed of peptides)

• Hormones – produced in endocrine glands – released into
  extracellular fluid to be taken up by specific target cells
• only specific neurotransmitters will bind with specific receptor sites –
  like a key in a lock

• chemical that attaches to a binding site is a ligand

• neurotransmitters are naturally produced ligands

• neurotoxins are also ligands and various drugs have their effect in the
  same manner – artificially produced ligands (e.g., LSD)
Neurons – from electrical to chemical




     Only specific neurotransmitters will bind
        with the post-synaptic membrane.
Axodendritic – synapse on the dendrite of the neuron
Axosomatic – synapse on the soma
Axoaxonic – synapse on the axon




   Axodendritic            Axosomatic                  Axoaxonic
• neurotransmitter specific postsynaptic receptors
• open to allow ions to flow into the postsynaptic neuron
• two main types
   • ionotropic
   • metabotropic
• receptor site has its
  own ion channel
• contain sodium
  channels
• fast acting and short
  lasting
• indirect method
• located nearby G-proteins
• G-proteins in turn activate
  an ion channel
• slower to begin and longer
  lasting
• G-proteins can also
  activate second
  messengers – enzymes
  that in turn activate an
  ion channel
     Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
        Magnetic resonance imaging in which changes in
         elements such as iron or oxygen are measured during
         the performance of a specific behavior
        Used to measure cerebral blood flow during behavior
         or resting
        Patients must lie motionless



Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Chapter 6
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Chapter 6
     Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
        Imaging technique that detects changes in blood flow
         by measuring changes in the uptake of compounds
         such as oxygen or glucose
        Used to analyze the metabolic activity of neurons
        Radioactive molecules are injected into the
         bloodsteam
        Very expensive


Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Chapter 6
     Advantages
        Can detect the decay of hundreds of
         radiochemicals, allows the mapping of a wide range of
         brain changes and conditions
        Can detect relative amounts of a given
         neurotransmitter, the density of receptors, and
         metabolic activities associated with learning, brain
         poisoning, and degenerative processes
        Widely used to study cognitive function
Kolb & Whishaw, An
Introduction to Brain and
Behavior, Third Edition -
Chapter 6

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Review for exam 1

  • 1. REVIEW FOR EXAM 1 Prof. Bauchner Psych 180, Section 1 September 24, 2012
  • 3. Parts Of The Neuron • Cell Body (Soma): contains the nucleus of the neuron which contains DNA and other organelles • Axon: Takes information AWAY from the cell body • Dendrites: Take information TO cell body (SIGNAL RECEIVERS) • Myelin: Insulating fatty layer that SPEEDS UP signal transmission. Breaks of myelin are called Nodes of Ranvier • Presynaptic Terminal: The region of the neuron conducting signals towards the synapse (contains the NTs).
  • 4. 3 Types of Neurons • SENSORY: allow you to receive information from the outside world via your senses (taste food, hear a drum) • MOTOR : permit communication with muscle fibers to allow you to move your body (contract or relax a muscle) • INTERNEURONS: majority of neurons in your brain…involved in thinking, remembering, logic
  • 5. What is a neurotransmitter? • A messenger of neurological information that travels from one cell to another WHAT KIND OF NEUROLOGICAL INFO?
  • 6. Types of NTs • Acetylcholine: MUSCLE ACTION, LEARNING AND MEMORY • Dopamine: MOVEMENT, LEARNING, ATTENTION, EMOTI ON • Serotonin: MOOD, HUNGER, SLEEP • Norepinephrine: ALERTNESS, AROUSAL
  • 7. WHAT IS CNS? • CENTRAL NERVOUS SYTEM – BRAIN – SPINAL CORD
  • 8. LOBES OF THE BRAIN http://www.paulnussbaum.com/
  • 9. FRONTAL LOBE Organization Concept Formation Mental Flexibility Personality Execution of behavior (Frontal Lobe is referred to as Executive System) Abstract Reasoning Problem Solving Planning Judgment Ethical Behavior Inhibition Expressive Language Affect Attention
  • 10. TEMPORAL LOBE • Memory and new learning Language comprehension Auditory processing Spatial processing Attention Emotion
  • 11. PARIETAL LOBE Reading Calculation Attention Short Term Memory Cross Modal Processing (e.g. listening, writing, reading notes) Spatial navigation Visual perception and discrimination
  • 12. OCCIPITAL LOBE Visual Processing Visually Perceive Visual Discrimination Visual Spatial Skill Facial Discrimination
  • 13. STROOP TASK BLUE YELLOW RED ORANGE PINK
  • 14. CLASS QUESTION #1 !! • Which lobe of the brain are we predominantly using when we attempt the Stroop Task? A) Frontal B) Temporal C) Parietal D) Occipital
  • 15. CLASS QUESTION #1 !! • Which lobe of the brain are we predominantly using when we attempt the Stroop Task? A) FRONTAL B) Temporal C) Parietal D) Occipital
  • 17. LIMBIC SYSTEM : THE EMOTION CENTER OF THE HUMAN BRAIN AMYGDALA- FEAR/SURPRISE HIPPOCAMPUS- SPATIAL NAVIGATION CINGULATE GYRUS- HEART RATE, BLOOD PRESSURE HYPOTHALAMUS - HUNGER, THIRST, SLEEP CYCLE, SEXUAL AROUSAL THALAMUS
  • 18. THE BRAIN IS PLASTIC?
  • 19. Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers EA Maguire, DG Gadian, IS Johnsrude, CD Good, J Ashburner, RSJ Frackowiak, and CD Frith. 2000. PNAS 97(8):4398-4403. Shenet.org i240.photobucket.com
  • 20. The Hippocampus • Brain structure which lies under the medial temporal lobe • LTM • Spatial Navigation • Part of Limbic System- EMOTION (hypothalamus, amygdala, pituitary) http://ahsmail.uwaterloo.ca/kin356/ltm/images/amygdala_hippocam pus_lateral_large.jpg
  • 21. Plasticity of Hippocampus • ↑ Volume relative to brain and body size when small animals engage in behavior requiring spatial memory (food storage) • ↑ Volume during SEASONAL CHANGES when spatial ability is at a maximum (Lee et al., 1998) • ↑ Volume has been noted in studies with musicians vs. nonmusicians (Schlaug et al., 1995)
  • 22. Cells of the Nervous System Five Types of Glial Cells • Ependymal Cells – Small, ovoid; found in the walls of the ventricles – Make and secrete cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) • Hydrocephalus – Build-up of pressure in the brain and swelling of the head caused if the flow of CSF is blocked – Can result in retardation Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 23. Alcohol as a Teratogen • Teratogen- a drug or other substance capable of interfering with the development of a fetus, causing birth defects Nlm.nih.gov
  • 24. Statistics on FAS • Overall incidence (annual) of Fetal alcohol syndrome: 0.9 per 10,000 births • Caucasians .9 • Asians 0.3 • Hispanics 0.8 • African Americans 6.0 • Native Americans 29.9 (NWHIC)
  • 25. Brain Imaging of FAS BRAIN OF BABY BRAIN OF BABY WIT WITH NO HEAVY PRENATAL EXPOSURE TO EXPOSURE TO ALCOHOL ALCOHOL Photo courtesy of Sterling Clarren, MD Areas that might be affected by alcohol exposure depend on WHICH AREAS ARE DEVELOPING AT THE TIME the alcohol is consumed. Since the brain and the central nervous system are developing throughout the entire pregnancy, the baby's brain is always vulnerable to damage from alcohol exposure.
  • 26. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome • Specific pattern of FACIAL FEATURES • CNS Dysfunction • Pre/post natal growth deficiency Photo by T Kellerman
  • 27. Distinctive FAS Facial Features: Human/Mouse
  • 28. Areas of Brain That Can Be Damaged in Utero By Maternal Alcohol Consumption
  • 29. Agenesis of Corpus Callosum CONTROL BRAIN FAS in 9-year old girl Mattson, et al., 1994; Mattson & Riley, 1995; Riley et al., 1995
  • 30. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 3
  • 31. Cells of the Nervous System Five Types of Glial Cells • Astrocyte – Star shaped, symmetrical – Structural support for neurons – Transports substances between neurons and capillaries (blood-brain barrier) – Scar tissue formation – Enhance brain activity by providing fuel to active brain regions Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 32. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 3
  • 33. Cells of the Nervous System Five Types of Glial Cells • Microglia – Originate in the blood as offshoot of immune system – Phagocytosis: scavenge debris (e.g., dead cells) • Oligodendroglia Cell – Glial cell in the central nervous system that myelinates axons – Myelin • Glial coating that surrounds axons Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 34. Cells of the Nervous System Five Types of Glial Cells • Schwann Cell – Glial cell in the peripheral nervous system that myelinates axons • Multiple Sclerosis (MS) – Nervous system disorder that results from the loss of myelin around axons
  • 35. Cells of the Nervous System Five Types of Glial Cells • Paralysis – Loss of sensation and movement due to nervous system injury • Peripheral Nervous System – Microglia and Schwann cells help repair neurons • Central Nervous System – Repair does not take place, regrowth may even be inhibited Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 36. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 3
  • 37. Electrical Activity of a Membrane Resting Potential • Resting Potential – Electrical charge across the cell membrane in the absence of stimulation – A store of negative energy on the intracellular side relative to the extracellular side – Approximately -70 mV Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 38. Electrical Activity of a Membrane Resting Potential • Four charged particles take part in producing the resting potential – Sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-) • Higher concentration outside cell – Potassium (K+) and large proteins (A-) • Higher concentration inside cell Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 39. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 40. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 41. Electrical Activity of a Membrane Resting Potential • Maintaining the Resting Potential – Large A- molecules cannot leave cell: make inside negative – Ungated channels allow K+ and Cl- to move into and out of cell more freely, but gated sodium channels keep out Na+ ions – Na+-K+ pumps extrude Na+ from intracellular fluid and inject K+ Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 42. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 43. Electrical Activity of a Membrane Graded Potentials • Hyperpolarization – Increase in electrical charge across a membrane (more negative) – Usually due to the inward flow of chloride ions or outward flow of potassium ions – Tetraethylammonium (TEA) • Depolarization – Decrease in electrical charge across a membrane (more positive) – Usually due to the inward flow of sodium – Tetrodotoxin Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition -
  • 44. • Neurotransmitters - chemical substance released from the end of a neuron during the propagation of a nerve impulse; it relays information from one neuron to another. • Neuromodulators – secreted in larger amounts and diffuse further (composed of peptides) • Hormones – produced in endocrine glands – released into extracellular fluid to be taken up by specific target cells
  • 45. • only specific neurotransmitters will bind with specific receptor sites – like a key in a lock • chemical that attaches to a binding site is a ligand • neurotransmitters are naturally produced ligands • neurotoxins are also ligands and various drugs have their effect in the same manner – artificially produced ligands (e.g., LSD)
  • 46. Neurons – from electrical to chemical Only specific neurotransmitters will bind with the post-synaptic membrane.
  • 47. Axodendritic – synapse on the dendrite of the neuron Axosomatic – synapse on the soma Axoaxonic – synapse on the axon Axodendritic Axosomatic Axoaxonic
  • 48. • neurotransmitter specific postsynaptic receptors • open to allow ions to flow into the postsynaptic neuron • two main types • ionotropic • metabotropic
  • 49. • receptor site has its own ion channel • contain sodium channels • fast acting and short lasting
  • 50. • indirect method • located nearby G-proteins • G-proteins in turn activate an ion channel • slower to begin and longer lasting
  • 51. • G-proteins can also activate second messengers – enzymes that in turn activate an ion channel
  • 52. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)  Magnetic resonance imaging in which changes in elements such as iron or oxygen are measured during the performance of a specific behavior  Used to measure cerebral blood flow during behavior or resting  Patients must lie motionless Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 6
  • 53. Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 6
  • 54. Positron Emission Tomography (PET)  Imaging technique that detects changes in blood flow by measuring changes in the uptake of compounds such as oxygen or glucose  Used to analyze the metabolic activity of neurons  Radioactive molecules are injected into the bloodsteam  Very expensive Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 6
  • 55. Advantages  Can detect the decay of hundreds of radiochemicals, allows the mapping of a wide range of brain changes and conditions  Can detect relative amounts of a given neurotransmitter, the density of receptors, and metabolic activities associated with learning, brain poisoning, and degenerative processes  Widely used to study cognitive function Kolb & Whishaw, An Introduction to Brain and Behavior, Third Edition - Chapter 6