Term
Marr's levels of analysis |
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Definition
Level 1 = computation (why [problem]) Level 2 = algorithm (what [rules]) Level 3 = implementation (how [physical]) |
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Term
relationship from level 1 --> 2 & 2--> 3 for Marr's levels of analysis |
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Definition
1 suggests 2 --> 2 predicts 3 |
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Term
relationship from level 3 --> 2 & 2 --> 1 for Marr's levels of analysis |
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Definition
3 confirms 2 --> 2 explains 1 |
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Term
computational theory (Marr's levels) |
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Definition
what is the goal of the computation, why is it appropriate, & what is the logic of the strategy by which it can be carried out? |
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Term
representation & algorithm (Marr's levels) |
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Definition
how can this computational theory be implemented? in particular, what is the representation for the input & output, & what is the algorithm for the transformation? |
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Term
hardware implementation (Marr's levels) |
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Definition
how can the representation & algorithm be realized physically? |
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Term
which level of Marr's levels is described by this statement: motor & sensory information come into association cortices |
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Definition
algorithmic! (circuit is mostly the algorithmic level) |
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Term
computational level (Marr) of stress |
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Definition
it helps us address a stressor in our environment |
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Term
algorithmic (Marr) understanding of stress |
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Definition
what allows stress to happen |
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Term
implementation (Marr) analysis & understanding of stress |
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Definition
what does cortisol & what does adrenaline do? |
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Term
do we have many or a few association cortices? |
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Definition
several (most of the brain!) |
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Term
2 things taken into account when deriving Brodmann areas |
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Definition
1. physiological properties 2. functional properties |
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Term
practice about 100 years ago in which people felt that bumps on the head meant different things in terms of various conditions |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
most of the somatosensory cortex is made up of _______ cells |
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Definition
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Term
thalamus --> input to cortical layer _______ |
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Definition
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Term
other cortical areas & brainstem modulatory systems --> input to cortical layer ______ |
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Definition
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Term
layer 2/3 --> output to _______ |
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Definition
other cortical areas (deeper layers like 5 or 6) & the opposite hemisphere |
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Term
layer 4 --> output to _______ |
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Definition
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Term
layer 5 --> output to ______ |
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Definition
other cortical areas & deeper structures |
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Term
layer 6 --> output to _______ |
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Definition
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Term
how strict is the hierarchy of canonical neocortical circuitry? |
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Definition
much more loose than other parts of the brain |
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Term
how do we (experimenter) get signals from the different cortical layers? |
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Definition
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Term
if you sum up the various activity of the neurons that a given EEG electrode is recording from & it is synchronous, you will get a ______ read-out |
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Definition
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Term
if you sum up the various activity of the neurons that a given EEG electrode is recording from & it is irregular, you will get a _____ read-out |
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Definition
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Term
3 things handled by the parietal association cortex |
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Definition
1. attention 2. spatial awareness 3. certainty |
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Term
experiment: monkey presses a response bar at certain times & the brain activity is recorded from parietal cortex
if the monkey is ignoring the target: ? |
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Definition
you don't see a ton of spiking |
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Term
experiment: monkey presses a response bar at certain times & the brain activity is recorded from parietal cortex
if the monkey attends to the target: ? |
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Definition
you see much more spiking |
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Term
experiment: monkey presses a response bar at certain times & the brain activity is recorded from parietal cortex
if you increase the amount of juice the monkey gets as a reward: ? |
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Definition
you will see an attention spike in the monkey (more motivated) & more neuronal firing |
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Term
experiment: monkey presses a response bar at certain times & the brain activity is recorded from parietal cortex
if you give the monkey a clue about where to look for the next target: ? |
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Definition
you will also see an increase in neuronal firing |
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Term
why are we able to use many different model organisms to study sleep? |
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Definition
sleep is a brain state conserved across animals |
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Term
a form of electrophysiology where we measure changes in membrane potential by putting an electrode on top of the scalp |
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Definition
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Term
synchronized EEG activity is often referred to as _______ |
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Definition
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Term
3 things usually included in definitions of sleep |
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Definition
1. immobility or loss of consciousness 2. decreased response to stimuli 3. global changes in brain activity |
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Term
2 possibilities for how the wakefulness nuclei are involved in promoting sleep |
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Definition
1. you could inhibit these nuclei to induce sleep (default state: awake) 2. you could have these nuclei have a default state being sleep & therefore need high firing to wake you up |
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Term
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Definition
1. cholinergic nuclei 2. Raphe nuclei 3. tuberomammillary nucleus of hypothalamus 4. locus coeruleus |
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Term
we produce sleep by the regulation of ______ |
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Definition
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Term
stimulating reticular activating system in cat --> ? (experiment where cat has electrode in this brain region) |
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Definition
makes it less synchronous/frequency goes up/wave amplitude goes down & wakes up the cat |
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Term
stimulating thalamus in cat --> ? (experiment where cat has electrode in this brain region) |
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Definition
makes it more synchronous/bigger amplitude wave forms/slow waves & puts cat to sleep |
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Term
how would you test the reticular activating system to show that it was being tonically inhibited to cause sleep? |
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Definition
if we inject a GABA antagonist while it was asleep & the animal wakes up |
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Term
Marr's 3 levels of analysis |
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Definition
1 = computation --> why (problem) 2 = algorithm --> what (rules) 3 = implementation --> how (physical) |
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Term
with sleep, we know the answer to the problem (sleep) BUT we don't know the question (what problem is sleep solving...why do we sleep?)
maybe the question for level 1 (Marr): ? |
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Definition
how do we maintain the health of the brain & encode long term memory? |
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Term
what did we learn from the Randy Gardner experiment? |
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Definition
he stayed awake for 11 days & quickly after losing sleep he lost the ability to focus his eyes, identify objects based on touch (high level perception!), moody (loss of regulation of emotion), uncoordinated (loss of regulation of motion), paranoid (cognitive deficits, imagining things that aren't there), hallucinations, etc. |
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Term
sleep is actually a ______ brain state! |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
each stage of sleep is denoted in EEG by _______ |
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Definition
specific type of brain wave |
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Term
describe the cyclical time progression through the different stages of sleep |
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Definition
quick progression from stage 1 --> 4, spend a long time in stage 4 --> work way back up through stages to REM --> go back down to stage 4 --> work back in a cycle, etc. |
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Term
frequency of waves associated with waking |
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Definition
beta (15 to 60 Hz, 30 uV amplitude) |
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Term
behavior associated with waking |
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Definition
moving around, doing stuff, generally aware |
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Term
waking is a period of high, if transient, ______ |
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Definition
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Term
relatively high or low power of brain waves while you're awake? |
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Definition
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Term
frequency of waves associated with stage 1 sleep |
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Definition
theta waves (4 to 8 Hz, 50-100 uV amplitude) |
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Term
behavior associated with stage 1 sleep |
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Definition
light sleep, muscles relax/occasionally twitch |
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Term
are you easily woken from stage 1 sleep? |
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Definition
yes (low awareness though) |
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Term
sleep wave read-out associated with stage 2 sleep |
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Definition
sleep spindles (10 - 12 Hz, 50 - 150 uV amplitude) |
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Term
behavior associated with stage 2 sleep |
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Definition
eye movements stop, body temperature drops |
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Term
stage 2 sleep is associated with bursting behavior in _______ connections |
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Definition
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Term
frequency waves associated with stage 3 & 4 sleep |
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Definition
delta waves (0.5 - 4 Hz, 100 - 150 uV amplitude) |
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Term
behavior associated with stage 3 & 4 sleep |
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Definition
deep sleep, breathing & heart rate slow to lowest point |
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Term
how does the duration of stage 3 & 4 sleep change throughout the sleep? |
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Definition
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Term
sleep wave read-out associated with REM sleep |
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Definition
waves similar to wakefulness, but also show "sawtooth" theta waves |
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Term
behavior associated with REM sleep |
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Definition
eyes move rapidly, breathing & heart rate increase, limbs paralyzed |
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Term
which sleep stage is most associated with dreaming? |
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Definition
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Term
how does the duration of REM sleep change throughout the sleep? |
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Definition
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Term
REM sleep shows increased _______ activity |
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Definition
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Term
main hypothesis for why we need REM sleep |
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Definition
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Term
what is inactivated during REM sleep? |
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Definition
posterior cingulate cortex |
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Term
2 regions activated during REM sleep |
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Definition
1. limbic system 2. hippocampus |
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Term
3 theories about what dreams are |
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Definition
1. nothing (Hobson, 1998) 2. memory consolidation 3. emotional regulation |
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Term
4 arguments for why sleep may be a homeostatic mechanism |
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Definition
1. low frequency synchronous activity 2. stages 3 & 4 increase in duration 3. slow wave activity can be detected in tired, but awake, individuals 4. importance of general sleep |
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Term
4 arguments for why sleep may be important for memory consolidation |
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Definition
1. activity similar to waking activity during REM 2. activation of hippocampus during REM 3. rich sensory signaling during dreams in REM sleep 4. importance of specifically REM sleep |
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Term
2 arguments for why sleep may be important for emotional regulation |
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Definition
1. increases in limbic areas during REM sleep 2. importance of specifically REM sleep |
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Term
sleep is a series of brain states that occur in a cyclical pattern, characterized by _______ |
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Definition
specific frequencies of brainwaves |
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Term
is sleep a necessary function? |
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Definition
yes! (the lack of it can lead to short-term cognitive deficits & long-term health consequences) |
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Term
2 ways to read a brain wave read-out to tell if someone is dreaming |
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Definition
1. increased thalamocortical activity 2. brainwaves that resemble waking |
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Term
do we know the purpose of sleep? |
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Definition
no (many cognitive faculties degrade without sleep though) |
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Term
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Definition
1: computation (why [problem]) 2: algorithm (what [rules]) 3: implementation (how [physical]) |
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Term
narcolepsy = sleeping disease caused by lack of production of a neuropeptide from the _______ |
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Definition
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Term
what is the act of taking some sort of sensory information & focusing in on it? |
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Definition
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Term
example of attention as selective filtering |
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Definition
if you hear two different kinds of dialogue but are told to only pay attention to one of them, you will be able to repeat the attended dialogue but forget/ignore the other dialogue |
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Term
task: you are told to raise your hand to the side of the screen a star appears on; prior to star appearing you will see an arrow
arrow pointing in the correct direction of the star --> ? |
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Definition
decrease in reaction time |
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Term
task: you are told to raise your hand to the side of the screen a star appears on; prior to star appearing you will see an arrow
arrow pointing in the incorrect direction of the star --> ? |
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Definition
increase in reaction time |
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Term
task: find the number 2 in an image including mostly 5's
how could you use top down attention to look for it? |
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Definition
direct your brain on what it needs to focus on |
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Term
task: find the number 2 in an image including mostly 5's
how could you use bottom up attention to look for it? |
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Definition
if the 2 is highlighted in a different color |
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Term
PPC works strongly with the ______ |
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Definition
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Term
one cue in receptive field of a PPC neuron --> response? |
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Definition
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Term
lots of distractors outside of receptive field/where you're paying attention for a PPC neuron --> response? |
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Definition
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Term
experiment: you tell a monkey to pay attention to a given stimulus & record from PPC
if the monkey continues to pay attention to it --> ? |
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Definition
you will see sustained higher firing |
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Term
experiment: you tell a monkey to pay attention to a given stimulus & record from PPC
if the monkey ignores it after the initial pop out --> ? |
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Definition
you will see a lower sustained firing |
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Term
5 steps of taking in/paying attention to visual information |
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Definition
1. visual scene comes into the eye 2. is broken down into its features 3. information is fed forward along "where" pathway to PPC & PFC 4. PFC is responsible for top-down modulation (i.e. "look for pink" or "look for the number 2") vs PPC is responsible for bottom up ("ooo look! it's orange in a field of green!" or "mmm carrot") 5. they also actually feed back to visual cortex |
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Term
how can top down input affect incoming sensory information? |
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Definition
can cause certain sensory information to pop out more |
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Term
if you ask a patient with hemineglect (damage to right inferior parietal lobe) to draw a line in the middle of a line (to bisect it) --> ? |
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Definition
they will not be able to do it (the line will be drifted to the right) |
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Term
if you ask a patient with hemineglect (damage to right inferior parietal lobe) to draw a house --> ? |
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Definition
they will only draw half of the house! (the right half) |
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Term
if you ask a patient with hemineglect (damage to right inferior parietal lobe) to draw a clock --> ? |
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Definition
they will draw a clock with all of the numbers (1 - 12) on the right side |
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Term
is the lateralization in cases of hemineglect caused by right inferior parietal lobe damage unique to humans? |
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Definition
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Term
frontal areas are particularly involved in ______ attention |
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Definition
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Term
experiment: stimulated FEF --> you can evoke a saccade
if you stimulate FEF while there is something in V4 receptive field --> ? |
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Definition
you can increase/sustain V4 activity |
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Term
experiment: stimulated FEF --> you can evoke a saccade
if you stimulate FEF while there is not something in V4 receptive field --> ? |
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Definition
this doesn't really make a difference! |
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Term
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Definition
1. computation 2. algorithm 3. implementation |
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Term
what could be involved in the modulation of attention? |
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Definition
catecholamines! (they're great at modulation!) |
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Term
anterior attention system |
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Definition
dopamine selectively gates inputs to the anterior system via D1 receptor inhibition of excitatory NMDA inputs |
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Term
posterior attention system |
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Definition
norepinephrine enhances the signal-to-noise ratio of target cells by inhibiting basal neuronal firing |
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Term
2 ways attention can work |
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Definition
1. increasing signal 2. decreasing noise |
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Term
do dopamine & NE change the neuron's firing? |
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Definition
no (but they do change how those neurons respond to other inputs) |
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Term
5 steps in normal NE pathway controlling attention |
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Definition
1. binds alpha 2A receptor 2. activates Gi proteins 3. inhibits cAMP 4. closes HCN channels 5. inputs are shunted |
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Term
how is an ADHD brain affected for the normal NE pathway controlling attention? |
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Definition
NE doesn't exist SO other G proteins can get activated --> activates cAMP --> opens HCN channels -> inputs are not shunted |
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Term
circadian rhythm pattern repeats in about ______ |
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Definition
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Term
2 components involved in circadian rhythem |
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Definition
1. an "internal clock" 2. external stimuli (Zeitgebers) |
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Term
in humans, circadian rhythm usually works about a ______ system |
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Definition
26 hour (not exactly a day) |
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Term
what will happen to a human's sleep cycle if you take them & put them in a room where the lights are always on & they have no access to outside sitmuli? |
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Definition
will switch to about a 26 hour clock because they have no external stimuli about what time it really is, any light to give any clue, etc. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
what is the implication of the SCN neurons having a very regular pattern of oscillations? |
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Definition
works for a pattern of time keeping for the rest of the brain |
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Term
CRY-PER2 dimers influence on Clk & BMAL1 vs influence on Clk-BMAL1 dimers |
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Definition
positively influences transcription of Clk & BMAL1
negatively influences the formation of Clk-BMAL1 dimers |
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Term
Clk-BMAL1 dimers enhance the transcription of _______ |
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Definition
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Term
what creates the rhythmic innate clock? |
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Definition
pattern of C-P/C-B dimer concentration |
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Term
what helps generate the self-sustaining oscillations that the SCN produces |
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Definition
pattern of C-P/C-B dimer concentration |
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Term
molecular clock initially starts with high levels of ______ & low level of _______ |
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Definition
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Term
what is the main role of the SCN? |
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Definition
really reliable biological clock! |
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Term
3 steps by which SCN regulates wakefulness/sleep |
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Definition
1. inhibitory onto subparaventricular nucleus 2. excites dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus 3. excitatory onto LC |
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Term
SCN being active --> disinhibits _______ --> allows it to inhibit a lot of the "wake" centers (VTA, LC, Raphe nuclei, etc.) |
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Definition
nuclei from the preoptic area (normally, this area is inhibited by dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus) |
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Term
how does SCN inhibit production of melatonin? (2 steps) |
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Definition
1. inhibitory to paraventricular nucleus PVN 2. excitatory onto pineal to produce melatonin |
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Term
how does input from eyes allow for mice to be nocturnal |
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Definition
when light hits the eye, it excites the SCN --> makes the whole sleep process |
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Term
in humans, is melatonin increased or decreased in the light? |
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Definition
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Term
4 examples of zeitgebers (time-givers) |
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Definition
1. light 2. food intake 3. physical activity 4. social interaction |
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Term
_______ are daily fluctuations in several bodily functions, including sleep |
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Definition
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Term
3 things that influence circadian rhythms |
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Definition
1. external stimuli 2. internal stimuli 3. internal clocks (primarily the SCN) |
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Term
SCN is always excited by ______, SCN always decreases production of ________ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
you are more likely to remember what you heard/read first & last better than something in the middle of a list |
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Term
when remembering things from a list, you tend to _______ |
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Definition
group them into chunks of three or four |
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Term
why can you increase your amount of digit memory from 10 up to 80 by practicing memorizing random digits? |
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Definition
you are setting up a network function that is able to better deal with this task |
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Term
3 major temporal categories of human memory |
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Definition
1. immediate memory (fractions of a second - seconds) 2. short term memory (seconds - minutes) 3. long-term memory (days - years) |
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Term
forgetting someone's name after meeting them while you're talking to them is a failure of _______ |
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Definition
feeding the information from immediate to short-term memory |
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Term
when can forgetting be good? |
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Definition
we don't want to/need to remember everything that we take in |
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Term
what happens to the memory of events as time increases between current time & the time when an event occurred? |
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Definition
memory will continue to decrease as time from event increases |
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Term
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Definition
1. declarative (available to consciousness) 2. nondeclarative (generally not available to consciousness) |
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Term
experiment: if you pick a red door, there will always be a reward behind it
controls do well, PD on L-DOPA do well, PD off L-DOPA cannot do this...this shows ________ |
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Definition
an issue with dopamine impairs nondeclarative memory |
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Term
acquisition & storage of declarative information |
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Definition
short-term memory storage: hippocampus & related structures
long-term storage: a variety of cortical sites (Wernicke's area for the meanings of words, temporal cortex for the memories of objects & faces, etc.) |
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Term
acquisition & storage of nondeclarative information |
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Definition
short-term memory storage: sites unknown but presumably widespread
long-term storage: cerebellum, basal ganglia, premotor cortex, & other sites related to motor behavior |
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Term
experiment: a person perceives an image of an object & then is asked to imagine the object
what visual areas will be activated? |
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Definition
the same areas of visual cortex will be activated during imagination as those activated during physical perception |
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Term
what process is necessary for learning? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the physical manifestation of memory |
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Term
memory is the product of _______ |
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Definition
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Term
experiment: if you show a chess board paused in the middle of a game & then ask two people to remember where the pieces are --> chess master vs beginner? |
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Definition
chess master will remember this much better than beginner |
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Term
experiment: if you show a chess board where the pieces are randomly scrambled around the board (not a real type of game possible scenario) & then ask two people to remember where the pieces are --> chess master vs beginner? |
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Definition
the beginner actually does better than the chess master! |
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Term
experiment: show people either food or non-food when they are either hungry or sated
best memory: ? |
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Definition
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Term
is context important for memory? |
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Definition
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Term
why might motivation be important for memory? |
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Definition
allows you to be more plastic, can more easily form new synapses, etc. |
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Term
inputs/outputs of hippocampus |
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Definition
widespread projections from association neocortex converge on the hippocampal region...the output of the hippocampus is ultimately directed back to these same neocortical areas |
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Term
hippocampus is where we discovered ______ |
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Definition
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Term
lesions to hippocampus --> huge deficits in _______ |
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Definition
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Term
neurons in the ______ can tune their firing to a specific place in space |
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Definition
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Term
what happens to place cells in hippocampus if the animal gets a rewad? |
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Definition
there is a very fast flutter of neural activity (sharp wave ripple) of place cells being re-played backwards |
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Term
8 brain areas associated with declarative memory disorders |
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Definition
1. thalamus 2. hippocampus 3. rhinal cortex 4. amygdala 5. mammillary body 6. prefrontal cortex 7. basal forebrain 8. fornix |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
memory is all about linking ______ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
active at a specific area in a space |
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Term
entorhinal cortex grid cell |
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Definition
active at various places in space |
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Term
Pavlov's dogs: before conditioning |
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Definition
unconditioned stimulus (food) --> unconditioned response (drools)
neutral stimulus (bell) --> no response |
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Term
Pavlov's dogs: during conditioning |
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Definition
pair together food + bell --> unconditioned response (drool) |
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Term
Pavlov's dogs: after conditioning |
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Definition
conditioned stimulus (bell) --> conditioned response (drool) |
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Term
two kinds of conditioning |
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Definition
1. delay (US & CS occur overlapping in time right in the end) 2. trace (US & CS are displaced over time when they are presented) |
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Term
example of operant (or instrumental) conditioning |
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Definition
rat can press a lever to either get a reward or avoid a shock |
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Term
key difference: operant vs classical conditioning |
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Definition
operant is voluntary, it is a choice |
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Term
spatial learning is often tested using the _______ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
was suffering from epilepsy (hyperactivity of neural circuits, can lead to seizures/absence of attention/etc.) --> surgeon removed hyperactive part of brain (bilateral hippocampal removal) --> cured him of epilepsy BUT had anterograde amnesia |
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Term
what is surprising about Clive (cannot form any memories...lives entirely in the present) |
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Definition
still knows how to play piano! |
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Term
how would Clive write journal entries? |
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Definition
as he would write lines, he would go back & cross them out because he forgot writing them & thought someone else wrote them |
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Term
what is the only thing Clive remembers? |
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Definition
his wife...he is overwhelmingly happy to see her every time she visits |
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Term
2 skills Clive can still do |
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Definition
1. play piano 2. read music |
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Term
does Clive still remember some facts? |
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Definition
yes (ex. brings up Buckingham Palace being a place in conversation) |
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Term
2 things found in AD brain |
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Definition
1. neurofibrillary tangles 2. amyloid plaques |
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Term
AD particularly affects ______ |
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Definition
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Term
middle step in AD memory loss progression |
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Definition
losing things around the house - still does will on memory tests |
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Term
later step in AD memory loss progression |
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Definition
trouble finding the right words in conversation, organization, learning new names, facts |
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Term
final step in AD memory loss progression |
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Definition
lose all inside & abilities in daily living |
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Term
declarative & procedural memories are the result of linking information & contexts through ______ |
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Definition
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Term
declarative memory in particular resides in the _______ |
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Definition
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Term
how can we create false memories? |
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Definition
ex) activate the "blue room" cells when the mouse was in the red room getting foot shock --> mouse became scared of blue room |
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Term
the amount of ______ in brains is the highest in humans |
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Definition
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Term
humans have the most developed/folded _______ |
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how has the frontal region of the skull changed throughout time? |
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can be seen to have grown outwards |
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3 things we have to do to make decisions |
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1. assess the state of the world 2. determine values of actions, outcomes based on predicted relationships 3. generate responses that maximize value, minimize cost |
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the critical element to decision making is to learn _______ |
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Definition
values & how to apply values aka understand contex |
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3 fundamentals of value systems |
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1. having values 2. knowing the rules governing how to apply them 3. learning & dealing with complex information |
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2 things saccades are important for |
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1. attention 2. how we view the world |
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given a visual of someone looking at something else: control vs autism inviduals |
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control individuals will be able to interpret that the image they are looking at is what the individual wants
individuals with autism will guess things in the image at random about what the individual wants |
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3 steps in reinforcement learning feedback loop |
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1. environment 2. reward & state information to the agent 3. action back on the environment |
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association cortices help bring ________ from the environment to the agent |
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5 brain regions involved in thinking, planning, & deciding |
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1. dorsomedial prefrontal cortex 2. orbitofrontal cortex 3. dorsal anterior cingulate cortex 4. posterior cingulate cortex 5. ventromedial prefrontal cortex |
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6 areas connected to the lateral prefrontal cortex |
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Definition
1. supplementary motor cortex (SM) 2. premotor cortex (PM) 3. frontal eye fields (FEF) 4. parietal cortex (PC) 5. secondary visual cortex (V2) 6. secondary auditory cortices (A2) |
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2 areas connected to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex/orbitofrontal cortex |
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Definition
1. amygdala (Amy) 2. medial temporal lobe (MTL) |
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dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is good at _______ |
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dorsolateral prefrontal cortex gets dopamine input from _______ |
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equation for reward prediction error (temporal difference) |
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actual reward at this time + discount factor * predicted reward in the future - predicted reward at this time |
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no prediction & reward occurs --> ? |
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big dopamine spike at reward |
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reward prediction & reward occurs --> ? |
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Definition
big dopamine spike at conditioned stimulus (not reward!) |
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reward prediction & no reward occurs --> ? |
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Definition
big dopamine spike at conditioned stimulus BUT a loss of dopamine signal at when the reward should have occurred but it didn't |
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does brain use positive or negative feedback to help us learn about/ascribe values to things in various situations |
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why will a human take many less trials to learn a video game compared to a machine? |
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Definition
you are taking in visual information ahead of what your actual actions are giving you feedback on (ex. you can see something that looks like a bad guy, you assume ladders help you go up & down, you assume you don't want to touch the fire, etc.) |
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relationship between actor & critic |
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Definition
actor makes an action, critic gives response if an action was bad or good |
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4 steps in actor/critic model |
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Definition
1. policy (actor) 2. action on environment 3. reward & state information to the value table (critic) 4. critique to the policy (actor) |
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experiment: monkey is trained to pick up either a cylinder or a pyramid & under the pyramid is always a cherry treat; monkey is also trained to pick up either a square or a dome & under the square is always a peanut treat; during the test, the monkey is given either the pyramid or square to choose from (both are rewarded)
if you sate the monkey on cherries prior to testing --> ? |
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Definition
he will pick up the square to get the peanuts |
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Term
experiment: monkey is trained to pick up either a cylinder or a pyramid & under the pyramid is always a cherry treat; monkey is also trained to pick up either a square or a dome & under the square is always a peanut treat; during the test, the monkey is given either the pyramid or square to choose from (both are rewarded)
if you sate the monkey on peanuts prior to testing --> ? |
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Definition
he will pick up the pyramid to get the cherries |
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how did scientists learn that rules are encoded in the PFC? |
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Definition
rules that went together (either juice or low tone) show same neural response, and other rules that went together (either no juice or high tone) show same neural response but distinct from the other rule |
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why would it be bad that attention will be taken out of activity if you have a very strict set of rules? |
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Definition
something could change in the rules & you may not catch it if your attention is not present |
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Definition
in the different cases, you are asked to respond with either the word or the color of the ink |
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ACC is involved in ______ |
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in Stroop task, prior trial high activation of ACC --> ? |
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Definition
current trial higher activation of PFC |
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______ demonstrate major emotions (anger, sadness, happiness, fear, disgust, surprise, etc.) |
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3 things involved in emotion |
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1. physiology 2. behavior 3. feeling |
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voluntary smile vs laughter: someone with facial motor paresis |
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Definition
won't be able to make a voluntary smile BUT if they have an emotional response to something, their smile will look normal! |
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voluntary smile vs laughter: someone with a lesion to the limbic emotional areas of the brain |
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Definition
will be able to make a voluntary smile BUT if they are told a joke, they won't really get a laughter motor response |
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Term
pathway disrupted by voluntary facial paresis |
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Definition
1. volitional movement (descending pyramidal & extrapyramidal projections from motor cortex & brainstem) 2. pyramidal smile 3. motor neuron pools in facial nucleus 4. activation of facial muscles |
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pathway disrupted by emotional facial paresis |
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Definition
1. neural systems for emotional expression (descending extrapyramidal projections from medial forebrain & hypothalamus) 2. Duchenne smile 3. motor neuron pools in facial nucleus 4. activation of facial muscles |
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why is it so hard to fake emotion? |
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Definition
two separate motor systems between emotion vs voluntary facial muscles |
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Term
5 regions in limbic system |
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Definition
1. cingulate gyrus 2. parahippocampal gyrus 3. temporal lobe 4. orbital & medial prefrontal cortex 5. corpus callosum |
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Term
11 deeper structures in limbic system |
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Definition
1. mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus 2. fornix 3. anterior nucleus of the thalamus 4. mammillothalamic tract 5. anterior commissure 6. ventral basal ganglia 7. hypothalamus 8. optic chiasm 9. amygdala 10. mammillary body 11. hippocampus |
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if you do a lesion in a cat brain where hypothalamus & amygdala are separated from rest of brain --> ? |
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Definition
cat can have normal anger responses |
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if you do a lesion where hypothalamus & amygdala are separated from cerebral cortex but left in tact with the rest of the brain --> ? |
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Definition
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can you see emotion in animals? |
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Definition
yes! (ex. look at their face) |
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main fear center of brain |
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Definition
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where does the amygdala sit in brain? |
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Definition
right next to hippocampus (they interact a lot) |
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experiment: a mouse has to walk past an evil robot to get a pellet of food
normal vs lesioned amygdala mouse |
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Definition
normal --> mouse will run away at site of robot
lesioned amygdala --> mouse won't pay robot any mind & will go get food |
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patient with lesioned amygdala asked to draw emotions --> ? |
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Definition
can do most pretty much all fine EXCEPT FEAR |
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5 steps in pathway connecting auditory information to amygdala |
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Definition
1. auditory pathways 2. medial geniculate gyrus 3. auditory cortex 4. amygdala 5. output to circuits that govern somatic & visceral motor activity |
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is fear important for survival? |
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Definition
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3 steps in how learning occurs in amygdala |
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Definition
1. inputs (primary reinforcers) + inputs (natural sensory stimuli) 2. learning 3. outputs (orbital & medial prefrontal cortex; implicit motor actions) |
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Definition
1. cortical input (amygdala, hippocampus, orbitofrontal, anterior cingulate, temporal cortex) 2. striatum (ventral striatum) 3. pallidum (ventral pallidum, substantia nigra pars reticulata) 4. thalamus (mediodorsal nucleus) 5. feedback back onto cortex |
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3 regions hyperactive in depression |
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Definition
1. orbital & medial prefrontal cortex 2. amygdala 3. mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus |
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in bipolar, there is a wide swinging of dysregulation between what two areas? |
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Definition
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2 anatomy changes in PTSD brains |
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Definition
1. hippocampus becomes smaller 2. amygdala becomes bigger |
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experiment: PTSD brain vs control brain sweat response after extinction of learned shock association |
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Definition
PTSD brain shows significant increase in sweat response in response to CS paired to shock compared to controls; they also have significant increase in sweat response to unpaired CS! |
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Term
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Definition
1. VTA interneuron that releases GABA 2. nucleus accumbens medium spiny neuron |
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Definition
synapse of VTA interneuron GABA onto VTA projection neuron |
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Term
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Definition
1. glutamate inputs synapses onto VTA projection neuron 2. glutamate input synapses onto nucleus accumbens medium spiny neuron |
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Term
where cocaine & amphetamines act |
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Definition
dopamine release from VTA projection neuron to nucleus accumbens medium spiny neuron |
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Definition
nucleus accumbens medium spiny neuron |
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Term
basic emotions are controlled by _______ |
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Definition
innate, non-canonical descending pathways |
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the amygdala in particular modulates _______ |
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Definition
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learned emotions, like almost everything else learned, requires _______ |
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Definition
the pairing of stimuli & contexts through LTP |
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