parasympathetic nervous system
Rest and digest: The branch of the autonomic nervous system that promotes relaxation, conserves energy, and enhances digestion
physiological responses attributed to PNS
slows heart rate, constricts pupils, stimulates salivation, increases digestion, and promotes bladder contraction.
sympathetic nervous system
The branch of the autonomic nervous system that activates the body's fight-or-flight response
physiological responses attributed to SNS
increases heart rate, dilates airways, and releases stress hormones like adrenaline.
Hindbrain
Part of the brain located at the back, responsible for basic functions like breathing, heart rate, and coordination of movement.
Hindbrain is composed of
cerebellum, medulla oblongata, reticular formation
midbrain
Part of the brainstem between the forebrain and hindbrain. It plays a crucial role in sensory and motor functions, as well as sleep and wakefulness.
midbrain is composed of
inferior and superior colliculi
forebrain
The largest and most complex region of the brain, responsible for higher cognitive functions such as thinking, problem-solving, and decision-making. It consists of the cerebral cortex, thalamus, and hypothalamus, and plays a crucial role in sensory perception, motor control, and emotional regulation.
forebrain is composed of
thalamus, hypothalamus, basal ganglia, limbic system, cerebral cortex
thalamus
Relay station of the brain. Processes and filters sensory information before sending it to the cerebral cortex. Plays a key role in regulating consciousness, sleep, and alertness.
hypothalamus
Regulates body temperature, hunger, thirst, and hormone release. Controls sleep-wake cycles and circadian rhythms. Plays a role in emotions and stress response.
basal ganglia
smoothens movements and helps maintain postural stability
limbic system
controls emotion and memory
septal nuclei
Region of the brain located in the limbic system. Involved in regulating emotions and motivation. Plays a role in reward and reinforcement processes.
amygdala
Part of the limbic system in the brain. Involved in processing emotions, especially fear and aggression. Plays a role in memory formation and decision-making.
hippocampus
Part of the brain responsible for memory formation and retrieval. Located in the medial temporal lobe. Plays a crucial role in learning and spatial navigation.
how many lobes make up the cerebral cortex
4
frontal lobe
executive function, impulse control, long-term planning, motor function, speech production
parietal lobe
sensation of touch, pressure, temp, and pain; spatial processing, orientation, and manipulation
occipital lobe
visual processing
temporal lobe
sound processing, speech perception, memory, emotion
acetylcholine
voluntary muscle control, PNS, attention, alertness
epinephrine and norepinephrine
fight or flight, wakefulness, alertness
dopamine
Neurotransmitter associated with pleasure, reward, and motivation. It plays a role in mood regulation, motor control, and cognitive function.
serotonin
Neurotransmitter that regulates mood, appetite, and sleep. Involved in feelings of happiness and well-being. Imbalances linked to depression and anxiety.
GABA
Neurotransmitter that inhibits brain activity, promoting relaxation and reducing anxiety. It helps regulate sleep, mood, and muscle tone.
glutamate
Neurotransmitter responsible for excitatory signals in the brain. Involved in learning, memory, and neural communication. Overactivation can lead to neurotoxicity.
endorphines
Chemical compounds produced by the body that act as natural painkillers and mood enhancers. They are released during exercise, laughter, and other pleasurable activities, promoting feelings of happiness and reducing pain perception.
nature vs nurture
the influence of genetics and environment on human development and behavior.
sensation
conversion of physical stimuli into neurological signals
perception
processing of sensory information to make sense of its significance
threshold
minimum stimulus that causes a change in signal transduction
just-noticeable difference
minimum amount of change required for a difference to be perceived
Weber’s law
just-noticeable difference is proportional to the magnitude of the stimulus and this proportion is constant over the range of possible stimuli
signal transduction theory
effects of nonsensory factors (experiences, motives, expectations) on perception of stimuli
cochlea
part of the inner ear that detects sound
utricle
part of the inner ear that detects linear acceleration and head tilts in horizontal plane
saccule
part of the inner ear that detects linear acceleration and head tilts in the vertical plane
bottom-up processing
data-driven, recognition of objects by parallel processing and feature detection
cons of bottom up processing
slow
pros of bottom up processing
less prone to mistakes
top down processing
conceptually-driven, recognition of an object by memories and expectations with little attention to details
cons of top down processing
more prone to mistakes
pros of top down processing
fast
gestalt principles
ways that the brain can infer missing parts of an image when it is incomplete
habituation
process of becoming used to a stimulus
dishabituation
occurs when a second stimulus intervenes, causing a resensitization to the original stimulus
observational learning
acquisition of behavior by watching others
associative learning
pairing together stimuli and responses, or behaviors and consequences
classical conditioing
form of associative learning in which a neutral stimulus becomes associated with and unconditioned stimulus such that the neutral stimulus alone produces the same response as the unconditioned stimulus
operant conditioning
form of associative learning in which the frequency of a behavior is modified using reinforcement or punishment
EEG waves during awake stage
alpha and beta
features of awake stage
able to perceive, process, access, and express information
EEG waves of stage 1 sleep
theta
features of stage 1 of sleep
light sleep
EEG waves of stage 2 of sleep
theta
features of stage 2 of sleep
sleep spindles and K complexes
sleep spindles
bursts of neural oscillatory activity
k complexes
large spike in electrical activity
EEG waves of stages 3/4 of sleep
delta
features of stages 3/4 of sleep
slow-wave sleep, dreams, declarative memory consolidation, some sleep disorders
EEG waves of REM
beta
features of REM
appears awake physiologically, dreams, paralyzed, procedural memory consolidation
dyssomnias
sleep disorders that affect amount of timing of sleep
example of dyssomnia
insomnia, narcolepsy
parasomnias
sleep disorders that involve odd behaviors during sleep
example of parasomnias
sleepwalking
what pathway mediates drug addiction
mesolimbic
what NT is involved in drug addiction
dopamine
Piagets 1st stage
sensorimotor stage
features of piagets 1st stage
focuses on manipulation the environment to meet physical needs through circular reactions, stage ends at object permanence
circular reactions
repetitive acts that allows infants to learn about their bodies
piagets 2nd stage
preoperational stage
features of piagets 2nd stage
focuses on symbolic thinking, egocentrism, centration
egocentrism
inability to imagine what another person thinks or feels
centration
focusing on only one aspect of a phenomenon
piagets 3rd stage
concrete operational stage
features of piagets 3rd stage
focuses on understanding the feelings of others and manipulating physical objects
piagets 4th stage
formal operational stage
features of piagets 4th stage
focuses on abstract thought and problem soliving
deductive reasoning
deriving conclusions from general rules
inductive reasoning
deriving generalizations from evidence
heuristics
simplified principles used to make decisions
selective attention
allows one to pay attention to a particular stimulus while determining if additional stimuli require attention in the background
divided attention
uses automatic processing to pay attention to multiple activities at once
wernickes area
area of the brain responsible for language comprehension
wernickes aphasia
ability to speak fluently but have difficulties understanging language
brocas area
area of the brain responsible for motor function of speach
brocas aphasia
only able to speak comprehensibly in short sentences with great effort
arcuate fasciculus
connects wernickes area and brocas area
damage in arcuate fasciculus results in
conduction aphasia
conduction aphasia
inability to repeat words despite intact speech generation and comprehension
extrinsic motivation
based on external circumstances
intrinsic motivation
based on internal drive or perception
instinct theory of motivation
innate, fixed patterns of behavior in response to stimuli
arousal theory of motivation
the state of being awake and reactive to stimuli
yerkes-dodson law
aim for optimal level of arousal for a given task
drive reduction theory
individual act to relieve internal states of tension
maslows hierarchy of needs
prioritizes needs into categories; physiological needs are higher priority than emotional needs