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Nervous system
- controls systems of the body
- sends and recieved information from organs through nerves to the spinal cord to the brain
- central nervous system and peripheral nervous system
central nervous system
- processes, interprets, and stores information
- issues orders to muscles, glands, and organs
- contains brain and spinal cord
spinal cord
bridge between brain and peripheral nerves
peripheral nervous system
- transmits information to and from the Central Nervous System
- contains the somatic nervous system and the autonomic nervous system
somatic nervous system
controls skeletal muscles
autonomic nervous system
- regulated glands, blood vessels, and internal organs
- includes sympathetic nervous system and parasympethetic nervous system
sympathetic nervous system
- mobilizes body for actiion, energy output
- fight or flight
- diverts energy to essential areas
parasympethetic nervous system
- conserves energy
- maintains quiet state
- maintains equilibrium
Communication in the nervous system
neurons
neurons
- sensory and motor neurons
- glial cells
glial cells
protect neurons, clean up fluid
brain contains
100 billion neurons
sensory organs
recieve inputs
interneurons
connect sensory and motor neurons
spinal reflexes
command that occurs in the spinal cord not the brain because its a reflex
neurons are all
connected
synapse
connection from terminal buttons to dendrites
cell membrane
outer layer of the neuron
cell body(soma)
contains nucleus of the neuron
axon
extention of a neuron from the cell body
myelin sheath
glial cells that encase the axon and act as protection for the neuron
node of ranvier
- "stepping stones"
- pieces of exposed axon between the myelin sheath
terminal buttons
The branched end of the axon that contains neurotransmitters.
types of communication in neurons
excitatory or inhibitory
Excitatory
makes cell more positive
sodium (Na+)
on the outside of the neuron
Potassium (K+)
on the inside of the neuron
charge in the cell
more negative than outside
charge out of the cell
positive
the node of ranvier allows for _________ to enter the axon
Na+
inhibitory messages cause the inside of the cell to become
more and more negative (more potassium)
when excitatory and inhibitory messages cancel out
nothing happens
once voltage crosses 55 mv
action potential happens and is triggered (fired up)
What happens when an action potential is fired up
- sodium rapidly floods into the neuron (electric current)
- travels down the axon( like a wire)
- glial cells act as an insulator for electric current
- gaps in axon allow for more sodium to enter because if it had to travel all the way downt he exon, it would lose charge
- once it hits a synapse, it passes on to the next neuron
excitatory neurons can only pass on
excitatory messages
inhibitory neurons can only pass on
inhibitory neurons
Synaptic cleft
gap between the terminal button and the dendrite
synaptic vesicles
- neurotransmitter molecules inside the terminal button
- bind to buttonmembrane so that Na+ can flow freely in the cleft
reuptake
neurotransmitters are brought back up into terminal button after being released during action potential
neurotransmitter released by terminal button
- determines if its an inhibitory or excitatory cell
- never enters neurons then gets released once charge is transferred, stays in synapse, gets pulled back up, then is recycled to be used again
neurotransmitter binds to
receptor and opens the channel to allow for Na+ to enter through
major neurotransmitters
Serotonin, dopamine, acetylcholine, norepinephrine, GABA, glutamate
serotonin
Affects mood, sleep, and appetite
(and sensory perception, temperature regulation, and plain suppression)
dopamine
Affects mood, pleasure, sleep, learning, voluntary movement
(and attention, learning, memory, emotion, reward, response to novelty)
Acetylcholine
Affects muscle action, memory, arousal, vigilance
(and emotion)
Norepinephrine
Affects heart rate, alertness, and suppressed appetite
(and learning, memory, dreaming, waking, and emotion)
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
Affects major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain, sleep, decreased anxiety, and decreased tension
Glutamate
Affects major excitatory neurotransmitters in the brain, memory, and learning
Hormones
melatonin, oxytocin, adrenal hormones
melatonin
affects daily biological rhythms, and promotes sleep
hormones
chemicals that affect functions of organs
Oxytocin
promotes attachment and trust
adrenal hormones
cortisol, epinephrine, norepinephrine, emotion, stress, heat, cold, pain, injuries, arousal, prepare for action, enhance memory
Neuromodulator
modulate effects of neurotransmitters (how much effect it has)
endorphines
reduce pain and promote pleasure (similar to nnatural opiates), appetite, sexual activity, blood pressure, mood, learning, memory
Brain stem
composed of pons, medulla, RAS
Pons function
sleeping, waking, dreaming
- states of consciousness
Medulla function
automatic functions such as breathing, heart rate
RAS (Reticular Activation System) function
screening of incoming information, arousal of higher centers, consciousness (extends to center of the brain)
- filters information to see what can be ignored and what needs to be sent up (ex: feeling socks on feet, watch on wrist, humming noise, etc.)
Cerebellum function
balance, muscular coordination, memory for simple skills and learned reflexes, involvement in cognitive and emotional learning
- basic motor control, "muscle memory"
Thalamus function
relay of impulses from higher centers to the spinal cord and of incoming sensory information (except olfactory sensations) to other brain centers
- relay station, all senses pass through here except smell(maybe taste) then sends info to all corresponding part of the brain
Hypothalamus function
behaviors necessary for survival, such as hunger, thirst, emotion, reproduction, regulation of body temperature, control of autonomic nervous system
- 4 fs, fight, flight, food, reproduction
Pituitary glan function
under the direction of the hypothalamus, the secretion of hormones that affect other glands
- controlled by hypothalamus, controls the endocrine system
Amygdala function
initial evaluation of sensory information to determine its importance, meditation of anxiety and depression, formation and retrieval of emotional memories
- "is this important or not"
Hippocampus function
comparison of new sensory information with existing knowledge in order to regulate the RAS, formation of new memories about facts and events, as well as other aspects of memory
- memory isn't stored in one specific place, its everywhere
Cerebrum parts
frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital
- higher forms of thinking, outer layer of the brain
cerebrum function
including cerebral cortex, higher forms of thinking
occipital lobes
visual processing
parietal lobes
processing of pressure, pain, touch, temperature
- physical sensation
temporal lobes
memory, perception, emotion, hearing, language comprehension (Wernicke's Area-auditory cortex)
frontal lobes
movement, short term memory, planning, setting goals, creative thinking, initiative, social judgement, rational decision making, speech production (Broca's area - speech production)
whatever parts were involved during the vent contribute to ___________
memory
left hemisphere
controls right side of the body
-speech and language
right hemisphere
controls left side of the body
studying the brain by intervening in the brain (triggering parts of the brain)
observation, lesions, stimulation during surgery, TMS (transcranial magnetic stimulation)
"observation"
studying patients with brain damage
Lesions
removal or disabling of brain structure, disabling parts of the brain mainly done on animals
Stimulation during surgery
observe effects
TMS (transcranial magnetic stimulation)
Stimulation of brain cells using magnetic field temporarily disable neural circuits
studying the brain by intervening in behavior (exposing people to stimuli)
Electroencephalogram (EEG), Computed Tomography Scan (CT), Positron-Emission Tomography (PET), Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
Recording of neural activity detected by electrodes
Computed Tomography Scan (CT)
Image created using x-rays (can be used to show brain tumors)
- doesn't show activity, only damage
Positron-Emission Tomography (PET)
analyzing biochemical activity in the brain (ex: using injections of glucose like substance containing radioactive element)
- detects blood flow, injects a dye to track where blood is flowing
- increased blood flow indicates more activity
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Image created using magnetic fields
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
Image shows changes in brain activity over time by tracking blood flow and oxygen levels
- combines together to show an image of the brain and blood flow in different parts of the brain
Cautions with brain research
- images appear to be too real or more scientific
- can convey oversimplified misleading impressions
- images alone arent enough
- we dont know what the person is actually going through, just scars
- only shows excitatory messages, not inhibitory
consciosness
- avareness of internal and external stimuli
- states of consciousness
internal stimuli
pain, hunger, thirst, sleepiness, awareness of thoughts and emotions. information of whats occuring inside the body
external stimuli
site, hearing, temperature, touch. whats happening outside of the body
states of consciousness
- different levels of awareness
- ex: wakefulness vs. sleep
Biological Rhythms (cycles)
- periodic regular fluctuation in a biological activity
- may or may not have psychological implications
- can be tired to external cues (things outside the body that regulate the cycle)
- endogenous cues: generated from within
Circadian rhythms
- 24 hour cycle/the bodys clock
24 hour cycle
body temperature is high during the day and low at night, sleep-wake cycle
the "bodys clock"
- SCN: Suprachiasmatic Nucleus
- Part of hypothalamus
- sensitive to light
- melatonin: low light triggers sleep which releases melatonin to begin sleep cycle
stages of sleep
1, 2, 3, REM
Stage 1 of sleep
light sleep
- transition from wakefulness to sleep
- breathing and heartbeat slow
muscle tension and body temperature decrease
Stage 2 of sleep
deep relaxation
- minor noises wont disturb you
- less sensitive to noise
Stage 3 of sleep
Deep sleep
- slow wave sleep
- delta waves begin
- heart rate and respiration slow dramatically
- difficult to awaken from this stage
REM sleep
Dreaming
- rapid eye movements
- increased heart rate, blood pressure, breathing
-paralysis of voluntary muscles
-brain is almost as active as when youre awake
purpose of sleep
- not entirely known
- cognitive function and memory