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Psychology 001 Introduction to Psychology Christopher Gade , PhD Office: 621 Heafey Office hours: F 3-6 and by apt. Email: gadecj@gmail.com Class WF 7:00-8:30 Heafey 650. Pop Quiz Questions. Where do our thoughts, memories, and perceptions occur in the human body?

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Pop Quiz Questions

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  1. Psychology 001Introduction to PsychologyChristopher Gade, PhDOffice: 621 HeafeyOffice hours: F 3-6 and by apt. Email: gadecj@gmail.com Class WF 7:00-8:30 Heafey 650

  2. Pop Quiz Questions Where do our thoughts, memories, and perceptions occur in the human body? How do we direct the motion of our bodies (e.g. how do we get our eyes, limbs, mouth, and other parts to move the way we want them to)? What makes human unique from other animals, and what makes each of us unique from our peers?

  3. Notes about the brain… The brain is a dense, location specific organ that controls conscious and unconscious human functioning. The spinal cord and nervous system allow our brains to efficiently communicate with our bodies. Our knowledge about the specific regions of the brain and how they communicates is still limited.

  4. Why do we know so little? • Time: • We have just begun to develop technology that allows us to look at the brain in a very efficient manner. • Money: • Most of the current technologies that we have are very, very expensive to use. This limits us in both the number, and type of individuals that conduct research on this topic. • Variety: • The brain and nervous system are, in relative terms, HUGE! There’s a lot to examine, and we’re just getting started.

  5. How the mind/brain is studied… • In the past: • Philosophy and debate • Autopsy

  6. How the brain/mind is studied (cont.) • Currently: • Histology • Stains • Invasive Studies • Recording • Imaging

  7. Reviewing Stains

  8. How the brain/mind is studied (cont.) • Currently: • Histology • Invasive Studies • Autopsies • Experimentation/stimulation on animals • Chance and correlation lesion studies • Phineas Gage case • Hemisphere neglect example • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) • Recording • Imaging

  9. The Most Cited Lesion Example Ever… • Phineas Gage • Worked for a railroad company • Had a metal rod shot through his head • Survived the incident, but his behavior changed dramatically after the incident • Much more impulsive • More excitable and agitated • Struggled with the ability to maintain friendships, relationships, and conversation • “what was once a well mannered man, now became something that resembled a mere animal”

  10. Example of Chance Anatomy Studies: Parietal Stroke (Hemisphere Neglect)

  11. The Lesion Method • Strengths: • Can determine the necessity of a region for a certain cognitive process. • Weaknesses: • Lack of experimental control. • Time for plasticity. • Low number of subjects.

  12. TMS Studies

  13. How the brain/mind is studied (cont.) • Currently: • Histology • Invasive Studies • Recording • Electroencephalogram (EEGs) • Event related potentials (ERPs) • Electrocorticography (ECog) • Imaging

  14. Human Electrophysiology • Electrophysiology can record electrical potentials of large populations of simultaneously active neurons at the scalp • A direct measure of neural activity

  15. Applications of Electroencephalography (EEG) INDIVIDUAL NEURON ACTIVITY COMBINED NEURON ACTIVITY

  16. Electrocorticography (ECoG)

  17. How the brain/mind is studied (cont.) • Currently: • Histology • Invasive Studies • Recording • Imaging • Computerized Tomography (CT Scans) • Positron Emission Tomography (PET Scans) • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRIs, and fMRIs)

  18. Why Neuroimaging? • In comparison to lesion studies, neuroimaging experiments tell us a whole slew of information about the brain with some distinct advantages. • Noninvasive • Allows us to look at people while living • Allows us to get larger samples of individuals • Note: they also look at more specific activity that mere recording methods.

  19. Blood Flow Measures • The Beginning: CT Scans • CT scans were first introduced in order to see the structure of the brain (great for detecting abnormalities)

  20. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Measures variations in cerebral blood flow by tracking the decay of a radioactive tracer (an unstable isotope) usually tagged to water molecules. More blood = more neural activity…an indirect measure of neural activity

  21. PROs Decent spatial resolution (5-10mm3) Can also measure neurotransmitter metabolism. CONs Invasive Very expensive Poor temporal resolution (minutes) Cannot detect the neural response to discrete cognitive events. PET

  22. Functional MRI (fMRI) • Advances over PET • Non-invasive (no radioactive agents required) • Better spatial resolution (1mm) • Better temporal resolution (seconds rather than min) • How does it work? • Similar to PET in that it is an indirect measure of changes in blood flow • Blood flow is measured by the deoxygenating of the hemoglobin in your brain and a giant magnet spinning around your head

  23. How the brain/mind is studied (cont.) • Currently: • Histology • Stains • Invasive Studies • Autopsies • Chance and correlation lesion studies • Experimentation/stimulation on animals • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) • Recording • Electroencephalogram (EEGs) • Event related potentials (ERPs) • Electrocorticography (ECog) • Imaging • Computerized Tomography (CT Scans) • Positron Emission Tomography (PET Scans) • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRIs, and fMRIs)

  24. So what have we learned by examining the brain and nervous system through these techniques?

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