Hereditary
genetic
doesnât change, the nature part of nature v. nurture
research regarding how genes affect behavior are often done with twins due to identical genetic code
Behavior Genetics
study relative power and limits of how nature and nurture influence behavior
study twins (twin study)
identical monozygotic: same genome
fraternal dizygotic: different genome
Epigenetics
how environment affects genome
Eugenics
want to âimprove genetic qualityâ of people
Central Nervous System
soma is in the brain or spinal cord
Peripheral Nervous System
soma is outside of the brain or spinal cord
Somatic nervous system
voluntary movement
Autonomic nervous system
involuntary functions
Parasympathetic nervous system
calms/slows down
Sympathetic nervous system
arouses
Neurons
receives signals through dendrites and sends them through axons
axons are encased in myelin sheath â causes faster transmission of signal
Schwann Cells
make up myelin sheath
combined signal exceeds minimum threshold â neuron fires
all or nothing process
Glial cells
provide myelin and support, nourish and protect neurons
non-neuronal cells
not involved in neurotransmissions
Synapse
area between the dendrite and axon
Types of Neurons
sensory
body â brain
motor
brain â body
interneuron
only in CNS
connects sensory and motor neurons
Cell Body (Soma)
where organelles are stored
Dendrites
Branches from cell body
Receives signals
Axons
long extension of neuron
sends signals away from soma
covered by myelin sheath
multiple sclerosis: deteriorating myelin sheath
saltatory conduction
action potential âjumpsâ â faster signaling
Axon Terminal
end of axon
Reflex
automatic protective response to stimulus
Threshold
level of stimulation required to trigger a neural response
Resting Potential
neurons arenât firing but are able to
inside of axon charge: -70 mV
channels closed
threshold reached â channels open â depolarizes
Depolarization
Na+ gates open â Na+ goes inside axon
charge inside axon goes from -70 mV â (roughly) 40 mV
Repolarization
K+ leaves axon â axon charge goes back to -70 mV
Hyperpolarization
time neuron takes to go back to homeostasis after firing
Action Potential
movement of positive ions along axon
causes release of neurotransmitters
Reuptake
intakes excess neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters
chemicals released from sending neuron
travel across synapse and bind to receptor sites of other neurons
influence receiving neuron
Excitatory Neurotransmitters
trigger actions
depolarizes
Inhibitory Neurotransmitters
depress actions
hyperpolarizes
Dopamine
major excitatory neurotransmitters
motivates to repeat behaviors
schizophrenia: too much dopamine
parkinsonâs: too little dopamine
Serotonin
mood booster
happiness chemical basically
not enough â depression
Opioids
class of drugs
cause excess stimulation of dopamine
agonist of endorphins
slows down heart rate â not enough O2 to brain â death
narcan
reverse effect of opioid overdose
Split-Brain Patients
cut corpus callosum
hemisphere specialization
last resort for severe seizures
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
electrodes on scalp
measure electroactivity/waves of brain neurons
detect abnormalities in brainâs electrical activity
diagnose brain disorders
only shows function
Functional MRI (fMRI)
application of MRI
detects blood flow and brain areas
shows brain structure and function
Pineal Gland
releases melatonin at night
Hypothalamus
releases hormones that affect the pituitary gland
Pituitary Gland
master gland
secrete hormones
Agonist
mimics action of neurotransmitter
Antagonist
block neurotransmitter
Stimulant
excite neural activity
ex: cocaine
Depressant
slow neural activity
ex: alcohol
Hallucinogen
distort perception of reality
ex: LSD