NEUR 2600 Study Guide - Winter 2018, Comprehensive Midterm Notes - Cerebral Cortex, Neuron, Hypothalamus

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NEUR 2600
MIDTERM EXAM
STUDY GUIDE
Fall 2018
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CHAPTER 1: WHAT ARE THE ORIGINS OF BRAIN AND BEHAVIOUR
What is the brain?
The brain and spinal cord make up the central nervous system (CNS)
All of the processes radiating out beyond the brain and spinal cord constitute the
peripheral nervous system (PNS)
Brain
refers to something other than the organ found inside the skull
It refers to the brain as the body organ that exerts control over behaviour
The term brain
then signifies both the organ itself and the fact that this organ produces
behaviour
Nervous system is composed of cells called neurons
Neurons in the brain communicate with one another and with
Sensory receptors in the skin
Muscles
Internal body organs
The CNS needs ongoing sensory stimulation from the environment and from its own
body’s movement
The brain communicates by producing movement and observing others’ movements
Thus the term brain
refers to an intelligent, functioning organ
An active brain that is connected to the rest of the nervous system to produce
behaviour
The brain can be conscious to a great extent in the absence of overt behaviour
Locked-in syndrome: condition in which a patient is aware and awake but cannot move
or communicate verbally because of complete paralysis of nearly all voluntary muscles
Cerebral Cortex
Heavily folded outer layer of brain tissue composed of neurons (cortex = bark)
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Forebrain: prominent in mammals and birds, responsible for most conscious behaviours
Brainstem: source of behaviour in simpler animals, responsible for most of our
unconscious behaviours
Behaviour
Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt
“Behaviour consists of patterns over time”
Examples: movements, vocalizations, thinking
Animals produce behaviours that are
Inherited ways of learning
Learned
Most behaviours probably consist of a mix of inherited and learned actions
Relatively fixed (innate) behaviours are dependant on heredity
Relatively flexible behaviours depend on learning
Most human behaviours retain some mixture of inheritance and learning
Like other animals, we retain many inherited ways of responding
The sucking response of a newborn human infant is an inherited eating pattern
Later in life, eating is strongly influenced by learning and by culture
Complexity of behaviour varies considerably from species to species
Simple nervous system (eg. sea slug) = Narrow range of behaviour
Complex nervous system (eg. human) = Wider range of behaviour
Aristotle and Mentalism
Mentalism: an explanation of behaviour as a function of the nonmaterial mind
Ancient Greece: Aristotle
Believed the brain cooled the blood; no role in producing behaviour
Psyche: synonym for mind; an entity once proposed to be the source of
human behaviour
The psyche was held responsible for, or thought to control human consciousness,
perceptions, and emotions
Also processes such as imagination, opinion, desire, pleasure, pain, memory, and
reason
The nonmaterial psyche was thought to be an entity independent of the body
A nonmaterial entity governs our behaviour, and our essential
consciousness survives our death
Also thought to be entirely independent of the body
Mind
is an anglo-saxon word for memory
When psyche
was translated into English, it became mind
The philosophical position that a person’s mind (psyche) is responsible for
behaviour is mentalism
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Document Summary

Chapter 1: what are the origins of brain and behaviour. The brain and spinal cord make up the central nervous system (cns) All of the processes radiating out beyond the brain and spinal cord constitute the peripheral nervous system (pns) refers to something other than the organ found inside the skull. It refers to the brain as the body organ that exerts control over behaviour. Nervous system is composed of cells called neurons. Neurons in the brain communicate with one another and with then signifies both the organ itself and the fact that this organ produces behaviour. The cns needs ongoing sensory stimulation from the environment and from its own body"s movement. The brain communicates by producing movement and observing others" movements. Thus the term brain refers to an intelligent, functioning organ. An active brain that is connected to the rest of the nervous system to produce behaviour.

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