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Neuroscience and Behavior

Neuroscience and Behavior. Objectives . Gain a general understanding of the nervous system Gain knowledge of the structure and function of the neuron Navigate your way around the major brain areas and understand their function. Nervous System Hierarchy. Central nervous system. Brain

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Neuroscience and Behavior

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  1. Neuroscience and Behavior

  2. Objectives • Gain a general understanding of the nervous system • Gain knowledge of the structure and function of the neuron • Navigate your way around the major brain areas and understand their function

  3. Nervous System Hierarchy

  4. Central nervous system • Brain • ~2% of body weight, uses ~20% of resources • Composed of bunches of neurons, which form nerves • Spinal cord • Complex tangle of nerves that stretch from brain to tailbone • Collects & transmits info between brain and peripheral nervous system • Also initiates reflexes: automatic responses to an event

  5. Peripheral Nervous System • PNS links the CNS to the organs, muscles, and glands of the body • PNS has two parts • Somatic (SNS): nerves controlling voluntary muscle movements • Autonomic (ANS): controls glands, organs, blood vessels • ANS has two parts • Sympathetic: arouses body to prepare for action (fight or flight) • Parasympathetic: slows down body to reserve energy

  6. Sympathetic and Parasympathetic

  7. The Neuron • All brain activity originates with the neuron • The messengers of the brain-world • These cells receive signals from neurons or sense organs, process the signals, and send them to other neurons, muscles, or organs • Three types • Sensory: respond to sensory organ input • Motor: send signals to muscles to control movement • Interneurons: the go-between of sensory and motor neurons • We have about 100 billion neurons • Most, but not all, can be re-grown (severe spinal cord injury vs. cutting your finger)

  8. The Neuron

  9. The Neuron: Structure • Cell body: houses nucleus • Cell Membrane: skin of the cell • Axon: cable extending from the cell body • Impulse from cell body travels along axon to its end, where terminal buttons release neurotransmitters (chemical messengers), received by other neurons • Axon is covered by myelin sheath, which is composed of a fatty substance that helps impulses travel the length of the axon • Dendrite • Branches extending from cell membrane that receive neurotransmitters from other neurons

  10. The Dendrite • Increases receptive surface of the neuron • Contacts occur along surface of dendrite

  11. The Axon • Axon hillock • Myelin sheath • Nodes of Ranvier • The points just between the myelin sheaths

  12. The Neuron in Action • When a neuron receives impulses from other neurons, the cell membrane allows open exchange of positively and negatively charged ions • Action potential (change in electrical charge) runs down axon to terminal buttons • This all starts with the axon hillock – the gatekeeper of the neuron • Terminal buttons release neurotransmitters • Neurotransmitters cross the synaptic cleft to the dendrite of the receiving neuron

  13. The Neuron in action

  14. Communication in the Neuron • All-or-nothing • The action potential either happens or it doesn’t • Non-decremental • Action potentials don’t change in amount (voltage) as they travel • Refractory period • Neurons need 2ms to recover before they can transmit again • Threshold • The minimum level of stimulation required to trigger a neural impulse • Once you reach the threshold, the action potential doesn’t get bigger

  15. Several Neurotransmitters • Acetylcholine (Ach) • Slows down the body, memory, and attention (involved in Alzheimer’s disease) • Dopamine (DA) • Voluntary movement, attention, and learning; high levels are associated w/ schizophrenia • Endorphin • Reduce sensitivity to pain; linked with pleasure (opiate-like) • Serotonin • Arousal, sleep; Prozac increases levels of serotonin • Norepinephrine • Helps control alertness and arousal; low levels can depress mood

  16. History of Studying the Brain • Franz Joseph Gall (1758 – 1828) • Phrenology • The study of the structure of the skull to determine a person’s character and mental capacity • 26 ‘organs’ on the surface of the brain

  17. History of Studying the Brain Phrenological Map of the Skull

  18. History of Studying the Brain • Flourens (1794 – 1867) • Emphasized the importance of experimental research of the brain • Carefully controlled experiments on animals to determine localities of brain and their functions • Moved the field of brain research into a more scientific arena

  19. The Brain • Three main parts • Brain Stem • Limbic System • Cerebral Cortex

  20. Areas of the Brain

  21. Brain Stem • Region of the brain where the spinal cord enters the skull and swells • Medulla • Regulates heart-rate, breathing, blood pressure, and motor movements • Cerebellum • Controls skilled motor movements

  22. Brain Stem • Pons • Connects the two hemispheres of the cerebellum • Reticular formation • Sleep (Moruzzi & Magoun, 1961) • Attention • Thalamus • Relay center • Filters & organizes information from senses

  23. Limbic System • Hypothalamus • Feeding • Reproductive behavior • Temperature (Barbour, 1912) • Hippocampus • Memory • H.M. • Amygdala • Feeding • Memory • Emotion

  24. Cerebral Cortex • Two halves, four lobes • Frontal lobe • Motor cortex • Parietal lobe • Sensory cortex • Prosopagnosia • Unilateral neglect • Temporal lobe • Auditory areas • Occipital lobe • Visual areas

  25. Two Cerebral Hemispheres • Contralateral arrangement • Corpus callosum • Thick band of nerve fibers connecting the hemispheres • It’s how the 2 hemispheres communicate • Right-brained vs. left-brained? OR

  26. Left & Right Functions

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