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Abnormal brain activity is restricted to an epileptic "focus" |
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Primarily sensory or motor |
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restricted to temporal lobes often resulting in automatisms and alterations in consciousness |
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abnormal brain activity is brain-wide and has no originating focal point |
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results in violent convulsions beginning with a tonic phase(loss of breathing and intense muscle contraction) followed by a clonic phase (violent, rhythmic contractions) and then coma (lasting 5 minutes) |
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loss of breathing and intense muscle contraction |
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violent, rhythmic contractions |
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Activity spreads as abnormal electrical activity affects other regions of the brain |
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Rigidity, resting tremor, bradykinesia,postural instability |
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-Inherited -Symptoms don't develop until a person has reached 35 -Characterized by involuntary movements and rigidity -Progressive dementia, irritability, moodiness -Death 15-20 years after onset -Profound progressive destruction of GABA and Acetylcholine neurons in the basal ganglia |
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~1% of population develops in a lifetime. 2 million Americans each given year |
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-Observed in all races and cultures. -Onset sudden and intense. Begins with acute psychotic phase. -Brought on by drug use or stressors -Can be successfully treated with drugs, but long-term prognosis is poor |
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-Disorders of thought -Hallucinations -Delusions -Flattened emotional response -Poverty of speech -Lack of initiative and persistence -Anhedonia -Social withdrawal -Reduction in psychomotor speed -Problems with learning and memory -Problems with abstract thinking -Reduction in problem solving abilities |
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Process of detecting and encoding environmental energy |
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The result of the organization and integration of sensations into an awareness of objects and environmental events |
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Specialized neurons that change energy into neural signals |
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Local depolarization or hyperpolarization of the receptor membrane |
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The process by which energy is transferred into neural signals |
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Receive information from photoreceptors and send it to the ganglion cells |
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Receive information from bipolar cells. Axons make up the optic nerve |
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Amacrine and Horizontal Cells |
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Diverse, about 50 kinds, control the ability of ganglion cells to respond to specific aspects of the visual stimuli |
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A tiny area specialized for acute, detailed vision. In this area, there are no blood vessels and ganglion cell axons. Moreover, each receptor connects to a single bipolar cell, which in turn connects to a single ganglion cell for better acuity |
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Reception of signals that provide information about tissue damage |
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perception of an aversive or unpleasant sensation that originates from specific region of the body |
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Increase in pain tolerance |
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Decrease in pain threshold |
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When non-painful stimuli become painful |
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