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The study of mental activity as an information-processing problem |
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2 key concepts for cognitive psych |
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1. Information-processing depends on internal representations 2. Mental representations undergo transformations |
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Tasks are composed of a set of mental operations. A mental operation involves ____ (3 parts) |
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1. Taking a representation as an input 2. Performing a process on it 3. Therefore, produces a new rep = output |
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Computers used to simulate (reproduce) behavior or cognitive processes |
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The study of physiological processes of the nervous system |
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Issues with Single-Cell recording (2 answers) |
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1. Hard to penetrate a single cell w/out damaging it 2. When recording extracellularly, could be recording activity of several neurons |
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Functional maps describe similarities and differences b/t ____ in specific _____ regions |
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area of external space where stimulus must be presented in order to activate a cell - neighboring cells overlap receptive fields |
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topographic representations in vision - maps an external dimension (spatial location) to a neural representation of that dimension |
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What are multiunit recordings used to understand? |
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Help us understand the function of an area by IDing correlations in firing patterns of groups of neurons |
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selective removal of parts of brain to see how B is altered |
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Issues w/brain lesion experiments |
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1. areas connected to lesioned area might be altered as well 2. Person might create a compensatory strategy to minimize the effects of lesions which might alter B too |
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1. aspiration (suction) 2. electric charge to destroy tissue = messy 3. Neurochemical w/ a drug that selectively destroys cells that use a certain transmitter 4. reversible lesions w/ chems that produce transient disruptions |
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certain genes manipulated so they are no longer expressed |
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A branch of medicine that focuses on the function and dysfunction of the nervous system - used to understand how brain damage affects B |
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Uses the fact that the absorption of xray radiation is correlated with tissue density (most dense show up lightest, least dense show up darkest) - reconstructs 2D image into 3D - hard to discriminate 2 objects closer than 5mm (ex gray vs white matter on cortex) |
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MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) |
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Uses magnetic field to orient spinning protons in H atoms nucleus' parallel to magnetic force |
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Studies anatomical structure of axon tracts that form white matter - measures density and motion of H2O i axons - can image orientation of axon bundles |
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Smallest unit of 3D data that can be represented in an MRI - like a pixel, but 3D |
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imaging method used to evaluate circulatory system in brain |
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buildup of fatty tissues in heart breaks free and enter's brains vessels - when blocks blood flow to brain = stroke! |
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a mass of tissue that grows abnormally and has no physiological function |
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1. Gliomas: start w/abnormal growth of glia 2. Meningiomas: originate in meninges 3. Metastatic tumors: originate in noncerebral structures and invades bloodstream to reach brain |
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Degenerative and infectious disorders |
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- Assoc. w/genetic aberrations and envi agents - gradual onset of symptoms - ex. incl. Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, AIDS, Herpes |
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1. Closed: skull intact but brain damaged 2. Open: skull penetrated |
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2 types of Closed head injury situations |
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1. Coup: blow hits just below forehead 2. Countercoup: brain bounces back against skull --> occipital damage |
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Characterized by excessive+abnormally patterned activity in brain - seizure = main symptom |
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surgery to treat neurological disorders |
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Callosotomy/Split-Brain Procedure |
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removal of corpus callosum |
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DBS - Deep Brain Stimulation |
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implants electrodes in basal ganglia to produce signals to trigger neural activity - used to treat ppl w/Parkinson's |
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Single Dissociation experiment |
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2 groups tested on 2 tasks and a b/t group diff is apparent in only one task |
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Double Dissociation experiment |
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Group 1 impaired on task X and Group 2 impaired on task Y - strongest evidence that a patient has a selective deficit in a certain cognitive function |
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TMS - Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation |
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noninvasive focal stimulation of brain - magnetic field causes neurons to fire - can be used to induce virtual lesions (usu. combined w/fMRI) |
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EEG - Electroencephalography |
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uses surface electrodes to measure activity of pops of neurons (as opposed to single-cell recording) - used to find an Event related potential |
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signal that reflects neural activity related to sensory, motor or cognitive events = show stereotyped responses makes it easy to find abnormalities - created from avgd traces of several EEGs |
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an electrical event in a spherical volume of homogenously conducting material produces one unique pattern of electrical activity on the surface of the sphere |
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Given a particular pattern, it is impossible to figure the distribution of the charge w/in the sphere that caused it (infinite # of charge distributions in the sphere could make the same pattern) |
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Modeling technique to solve inverse problem |
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Why is vision called remote sensing/ exteroceptive perception? |
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enables us to detect information from a distance |
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Light reflected from objects > passes thru lens > image inverted and projected on retina (back surface of eye) > retina deep layer = filled w/photoreceptors = translate light into neuronal signal w/photopigments |
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2 types of photoreceptors |
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1. Rods: sensitive to low levels of light energy; good for night 2. Cones: active during day, respond to bright light, necessary for color vision "red" "green" or "blue" cones according to the response of their photopigments to diff wavelengths of light |
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Cones most densely packed in ____ (near center of retina) |
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From eye to ctrl nervous system |
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260 mil photoreceptors > 2 mil ganglion cells > axons of ganglion are the optic nerve > optic nerve splits into temporal and nasal sides (temporal stays on same side; nasal crosses to opp hemi at optic chiasm) > optic nerves to LGN or to superior colliculus or to pulvinar nucleus |
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from retina to lateral geniculate nucleus of thalamus - pathway of 90% of axons in optic nerve |
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from retina to superior colliculus <10% of axons in optic nerve follow this pathway |
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from LGN to V1 in occipital lobe |
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V1 (Primary visual cortex) is also called |
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Specialization hypothesis (for vision) |
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each visual area elaborates on a diff aspect of initial info in V1 and then integrates it (think of model that gallant drew in class) |
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Area MT = V5 sensitive to... |
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"middle temporal" area in macaques - sensitive to movement and direction but not color! |
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color; used to provide info about an object's shape |
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true colorblindness; only see shades of grey |
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Dichromats/Red-green colorblind ppl are missing what wavelength photopigments? |
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short wavelength photopigments = blue-yellow |
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have all 3 photopigments BUT are abnormally sensitive to just one |
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"motion blindness" = don't see the progression of motion just the end result |
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lesion of V1 restricted to only 1/2 of visual field => loss of perception only on contralateral side of space |
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smaller lesions produce more discrete regions of blindness |
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What subcortical structure is important for eye movements (saccades)? |
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residual ability to locate stimuli despite being blind! |
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MEG Magnetoencephalography |
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uses avg of active neurons' magnetic field traces to obtain ERFs (Event-related fields) Positives: same temp res as w/ERPs + localizes source of signal = good spatial res Negatives: only able to detect current flow if it is oriented parallel to surface of skull |
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PET Positron Emission Tomography |
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Assumes ^bloodflow to brain regions w/heightened neural activity - 2 injections of radioactive isotope in blood = during control and during experiment - results reported as a change in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) b/t the 2 conditions - shows activity in 5-10mm3 voxels |
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1. Radiowaves make protons in H atoms oscillate 2. Detector measures local energy fields that are emitted when proton returns to orientation of external magnetic field 3. Focuses on hemoglobin (carries O2) - When deoxygenated = more paramagnetic 4. fMRI gets ratio of O2 to nonO2 hemoglobin => BOLD effect |
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BOLD effect(blood oxygenation level-dependent effect) |
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ratio of oxygenated to deoxygenated hemoglobin |
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Impaired perceptual recognition that can't be attributed to impairments in basic sensory processes |
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a failure of perception that is limited to the visual modality - can perceive properties (color, motion) but can't ID objects or their uses - Visual info is registered at the cortical level |
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Perception and recognition are different things! |
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Perception and recognition are same or different? - see patient G.S. |
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What are 2 names for the "what" pathway for visual perception? |
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-Ventral -Occiptotemporal |
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What is the ventral visual pathway important for? |
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object perception and recognition |
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What are the names of the 2 cortical pathways for visual perception? |
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1) Ventral/Occipitoptemporal/"What" pathway 2) Dorsal/Occipitoparietal/"Where" pathway |
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What is the dorsal visual pathway important for? |
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Spatial perception - detects presence of stimulus, esp. those that just entered field of view - guides interactions w/objects based on their location |
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What are 2 names form the "where" pathway of visual perception? |
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- Dorsal - Occipitoparietal |
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inability to name objects |
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person can recognize objects but can't use visual info to guide their actions |
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our ability to recognize an object in different situations, such as - viewpoint changes - changes in illumination of an object - other things covering part of the view of an object |
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View-Dependent Frame of Reference |
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perception depends on recognizing an object from a certain viewpoint - useful for understanding perception if we compare known info to a novel view of an object |
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View-invariant Frame of Reference |
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Sensory input defines basic properties; -Other properties are defined with respect to the basic properties |
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Repetition-Suppression Effect |
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a neural response is more efficient and faster when the pattern has been recently activated --> Lower BOLD response |
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the type of neuron that can recognize a complex object - "grandmother cell" = a gnostic unit that becomes excited when a specific object (i.e. one's grandmother) comes into view - Many issues with this idea of neural representation |
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Ensemble/population Hypothesis of Recognition |
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Recognition is due to the collective activation of many units |
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Failure in object recognition linked to problems in perceptual processing - this is a ventral stream disorder |
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Apperceptive agnosia linked to damage in Right Hemi or Left? |
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patients have normal vision representations but cannot use this info to recognize things - not attributed to perceptual abilities |
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neurological syndrome where ability to read is disrupted |
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Disruption in ability to read resulting from a neurological disturbance (stroke, etc) -usu. in occipitoparietal region of L hemi |
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visual disorder that involves difficulty integrating the parts of an object into a coherent whole |
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Category-specific Deficits |
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recognition impairment restricted to a certain class of objects ex. living vs. nonliving objects |
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Why would a person recognize a nonliving object and not recognize a living object (such as a neighbor)? |
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remember nonliving objects by also remembering the functional side of them |
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Cells in what area are preferentially activated by faces? |
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Superior temporal sulcus + Inferotemporal gyrus |
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inability to produce volitional movement |
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a brainstem nucleus that is part of the basal ganglia - cells here are a primary source of dopamine |
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a part of the body that can move - distal example: arms/hands and legs - proximal example: neck, trunk |
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What are 2 types of elastic muscle fibers? |
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flexors and extenders of the effector |
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Control primary interaction of muscles and nervous system - originate in spinal cord, exit thru ventral root, terminate in muscle fibers - release neurotransmitter acetylcholine to make muscle fibers contract - get input from brain and sensory fibers in muscles |
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What neurotransmitter do alpha motor neurons release to make muscle fibers contract? |
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Brainstem contain what structures that are important for movement? (name 2 *groups*) |
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1) 12 Cranial nerves (control reflexes) 2) Extrapyramidal tracts (control spinal activity) |
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What is the primary source of control over spinal activity? Where do they originate and project to? |
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Extrapyramidal tracts which originate from nuclei in brainstem that project to the spinal cord. |
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Describe basic cerebellar pathway |
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Definition
Cortex receives most sensory input + input from association areas --> relays back to nuclei inside cerebellum --> modulates activity in extrapyramidal tracts or relays back to thalamus to influ. motor + frontal cortex |
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What are the 5 nuclei that compose the basal ganglia? |
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1) caudate 2) putamen 3) Subthalamic nucleus 4) Globus pallidus 5) Substantia nigra |
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What nucleus of the basal ganglia does most output go through and where does it go? |
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Definition
globus pallidus projects to motor cortex and frontal regions |
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Where does the corticospinal tract originate and go out to? |
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from M1 (primary motor cortex) to alpha motor neurons or spinal interneurons - called pyramidal tracts (but not just from pyramidal cells!) |
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What is another name for the corticospinal tract? |
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What important cortex area does Brodmann Area 4 contain? |
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Brodmann area 6 contains what 2 secondary motor areas? |
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1) Premotor cortex (PMC) 2) Supplementary motor cortex (SMA) |
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Which Brodmann area controls eye movements? |
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The production of speech movements involves what 3 parts of the brain? |
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Definition
1) Broca's area 2) insula 3) posterior inferior frontal gyrus |
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What kind of representation maps are in primary and secondary motor areas? |
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somatotopic representations |
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Does movement depend on the brain, sensory signals or feedback? |
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Definition
no, but it will be jerky movements without feedback and planning |
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Neurons in spinal cord are also called _____ ______ ______ because they trigger specific patterns of muscle activity when they are activated |
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central pattern generators |
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What does "afferent" refer to? |
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somatosensory (thru dorsal root of spinal cord |
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are humans with severe sensory deficits |
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movements are planned in terms of the desired final location - motor representation is based on the final position of the limbs to achieve the movement goal |
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What is motor cortex activity correlated with? (general idea of mvmt) |
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Definition
movement directions and desired final location |
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a statistical procedure that reflects the aggregate activity across cells - when calculated from neurons in motor cortex, we can predict the directions of a limb movement |
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An example of the hierarchy of motor control |
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Definition
Premotor cortex only codes for movement and direction M1 also codes for muscle activity |
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Brain-machine interface (BMI) |
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Definition
a device that uses the interpretation of neuronal signals to perform desired operations with a mechanical device outside the body (i.e. prosthetics) |
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What parts of body are affected for paraplegics? |
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Definition
Unable to use legs - injuries are below cervical nerves |
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What parts of body are affected for quadriplegics? |
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unable to use anything below neck - injuries are higher up in the spinal cord |
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a distributed network of neurons that respond to one's own actions and perceived actions of others |
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self-reference - comprehension of perceived actions involves reference to our own abilities in that action |
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Activity of mirror cells is correlated with what type of action? |
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Goal-oriented (either your own or someone else's) |
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Internally guided tasks activate what cortical and subcortical areas? |
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Definition
Supplementary motor area and basal ganglia |
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Externally guided tasks activate what cortical and subcortical areas? |
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Definition
Premotor cortex, cerebellum and parietal cortex |
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Medial(SMA) vs. Lateral (PMC) involvement in learning |
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Definition
Premotor cortex (lateral) better when learning a new task Supplementary motor cortex (medial) better after task has been learned (refines) |
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Definition
loss of voluntary movement on the contralateral side of body (usu. from hemorrhage) |
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loss of motor skills not related to deficits in motor control - usu. occurs w/lesions in Lhemi and parietal cortex - usu. accompanied by some aphasia |
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patient has a sense of the desired action but has problems executing it properly |
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patient's knowledge about the intent of an action is disrupted - might not know what tool to use/ how to use a tool |
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What is praxis and what hemisphere is dominant in this? |
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the representation of skilled movement; Lhemi more dominant regardless of handedness |
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Definition
when patients w/lesions of SMA reach out and grab objects w/affected arm even when they aren't supposed to |
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What are the 3 parts of the cerebellum? |
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Definition
1) Vestibulocerebellum (balance + eye mvmts) 2) Spinocerebellum (smooth ctrl of mvmt, axial muscles in trunk) 3) Neocerebellum (projects to M1, thalamus, and prefrontal cortex) |
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To what 2 nuclei of basal ganglia do most afferent fibers to basal ganglia terminate? |
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Definition
Caudate + putamen (together they are the striatum) |
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What are some functions of the basal ganglia? |
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Definition
1) initiation of action 2) commits to one action out of many alternatives 3) reward pathway (dopamine can modify BG connections based on what rewards) |
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What is the main symptom of Huntington's disease? |
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Definition
chorea (involuntary mvmts) |
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absence of voluntary mvmts |
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slowness in initiation and execution of mvmts |
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What causes Parkinson's disease? |
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Definition
atrophy of dopamine neurons in substantia nigra (decreases overall cortical activity) |
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What are ways to treat Parkinson's disease? |
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Definition
1) L dopa (synthetic precursor of dopamine) 2) Pallidotomy (create lesions in globus pallidus to inhibit hyperactivity) 3) Deep brain stimulation (implants in subthalamic nucleus that send out currents to stimulate brain) |
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Shifting hypothesis of basal ganglia |
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Definition
basal ganglia helps us shift from one mental set to another |
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