lesioning - damaged brain tissue; researchers study its impact on functioning, CT - x-rays of the head that create images that may show brain damage, MRI - people lie in a chamber that uses magnetic fields/radio waves to map out brain structure, EEG - electrodes placed on the scalp to measure electrical activity in neurons, MEG - a head coil that records magnetic fields from the brain’s natural electrical currents, PET - tracks when a radioactive substance goes through the brain of a person whilst they are performing a task, fMRI - measures blood flow to regions by taking continuous MRI scans of the brain, brainstem - controls automatic survival functions, medulla - base of the brainstem, controls heartbeat and breathing, pons - above the medulla, controls sleep and coordinates movements, retireticular formation - network of nerves that travels through brainstem into the thalamus, thalamus - top of the brainstem, relay station for sensory stimuli (except smell), cerebellum - at the end of the brainstem, processes sensory input, coordinates movement and balance, and enables nonverbal learning and memory, limbic system - made up of the amygdala, hippocampus, and hypothalamus, associated with emotions, drives, and memory formation, amygdala - two lima-bean-sized neural clusters linked to aggression and fear, hypothalamus - below the thalamus, in charge of actions such as eating, drinking, body temp, helps govern endocrine system with the pituitary gland, and is linked to emotion and reward, hippocampus - structure with two “arms” that wrap around thalamus, in charge of storing memories of facts and events, cerebral cortex - interconnected neural cells that cover the cerebral hemispheres; acts as an information-processing center, frontal lobes - portion of cerebral cortex found just behind the forehead; for linguistic processing, muscle movements, higher-order thinking, and executive functioning, parietal lobes - receives and processes sensory input for touch and body position, occipital lobes - portion of cerebral cortex at the back of the head; receives information from visual fields, temporal lobes - portion of cerebral cortex lying above the ears; enables language processing and receives information from auditory areas, motor cortex - part of cerebral cortex that controls voluntary movements, somatosensory cortex - part of cerebral cortex that registers and processes bodily touch and movement sensations, association areas - are spread throughout all four lobes to connect and add complexity to functions, plasticity - the brain’s ability to change and adapt based on experiences, neurogenesis - when the brain attends to mend itself by producing new neurons,
0%
AP Psych Unit One - Anatomy of the Brain
مشاركة
بواسطة
Ashleypeng
12th Grade
Psychology
تحرير المحتوى
تضمين
المزيد
الواجبات
لوحة الصدارة
عرض المزيد
عرض أقل
لوحة الصدارة هذه في الوضع الخاص حاليًا. انقر على
مشاركة
لتجعلها عامة.
عَطَل مالك المورد لوحة الصدارة هذه.
عُطِلت لوحة الصدارة هذه حيث أنّ الخيارات الخاصة بك مختلفة عن مالك المورد.
خيارات الإرجاع
المطابقة
قالب مفتوح النهاية. ولا يصدر عنه درجات توضع في لوحة الصدارة.
يجب تسجيل الدخول
النمط البصري
الخطوط
يجب الاشتراك
الخيارات
تبديل القالب
إظهار الكل
ستظهر لك المزيد من التنسيقات عند تشغيل النشاط.
فتح النتائج
نسخ الرابط
رمز الاستجابة السريعة
حذف
استعادة الحفظ التلقائي:
؟