PSYC1000C
General Psychology
2023-24 Term 2 (Spring Term)
Lecture 6: Brain and Behavior
Lecturer: Vince NGAN
Teaching Assistants:
Shawn HEMELSTRAND
Kate HUANG
Siyi ZHAO
True or False?
1) We in fact use 10% of our brain False!
2) People are either “right-brained” or “left-
brained” False!
3) Brain damage is always permanent False!
4) The human brain is larger than any other animal
brain False!
Brain–body mass ratio
Brain and Behavior
What are the basic structures of human brain?
What is the relationship between brain and behavior?
From L1
Biological Perspective of Psychology
Biologicalpsychology: Focuses on the relationship
between mind and behavior
Underlying biological processes, including genetics,
biochemistry, anatomy, and physiology
Evolutionary psychology: How our physical structure
and behavior have been shaped by the need for
survival
Focuses: Neuroscience, sensation, consciousness
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Mind-Body Relationship
Dualism (‘twoness’): the mind and body both exist as
separate entities e.g. Cartesian dualism
Monism (‘oneness’): the mind is what the brain does
Behaviorists and biologists focus onobservable, physical
structures and events that can be directly studied
Dualism was seen as outdated and unfalsifiable
But: View of mind as ‘software’ on the brain ‘hardware’
Behavior neuroscience studies the reciprocal
connections between the structure and activity of the
nervous system and behavior and mental processes
Biological changes often influence behavior and
cognition
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Objectives
1. Appreciate the delicate design of the brain
2. How its complex design makes different mental
abilities possible
3. How problems in any single element of the design can
lead to life-changing issues
4. Appreciate how much we can do to change our brain
and life
5. Begin to appreciate the amazing discovery of scientists
about the brain, the techniques used, and their
limitations
Overview
The neuron
The brain
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Early Attempts to Understand Where
the Mind is and What the Brain does
The nervous system
Clinical observation of injured or mentally
ill individuals
Examining bodies after death
Phrenology: Patterns of bumps on the skull
correlated with personality traits and
abilities
Behavioral functions are localized to
certain areas of the brain
Pseudoscientific with no validity
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Courtesy of William S.-Y. Wang
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Courtesy of William S.-Y. Wang
Camillo Golgi &
Santiago Ramón y Cajal
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Courtesy of William S.-Y. Wang
How do modern scientists study the brain?
Looking at brain structures
Histology: Microscopic examination
of the nervous system
How does the structure of nervous
system cells correlate with behavior?
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): Creating an image of
the macro-structures of the brain by creating a strong but
temporary magnetic field through the head
How do the larger structures of nervous system correlate with
behavior?
How do modern scientists study the brain?
Measuring electromagnetic signals from the
brain
Electroencephalogram (EEG): Measurement of
the brain’s electrical activity using electrodes
placed on the scalp
Event-related potential (ERP): Measurement formed by
averaging EEG responses to a stimulus, such as a light or
tone
Did the person receive the stimulus?
Single-cell recording: Measurement of a single
neuron’s activity obtained through a surgically
implanted electrode
What types of stimulation make this neuron respond?
How do modern scientists study the brain?
Measuring electromagnetic signals from
the brain
Magnetoencephalography (MEG):
Recording of the tiny amounts of magnetic
output of the brain
What part of the brain react to this stimulus?
Betterspatial resolution (2-3 mm) compared
to EEG (7-10 mm)
But much more expensive (10-100 times more
expensive) and hard to set up (huge
equipment and specially shielded room)
How do modern scientists study the brain?
Measuring other correlates to electrical neural
activities in the brain
Positron emission tomography (PET): Measurement
that uses the accumulation of radioactively tagged
glucose or oxygen to identify activity levels in parts of
the brain
What parts of the brain are active during a particular task?
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI):
Identification of active parts of the brain using
magnetism to track the flow of oxygen
What parts of the brain are active during a particular task?
How do modern scientists study the brain?
Observing the effects of damages to
parts of the brain
Lesions: Naturally occurring or
deliberate damage to the brain
What behavioral changes are correlated
with brain damage?
Examples:
Lesion to primary visual cortex: Loss of
conscious sight
Lesion to primary auditory cortex:
Impairment to speech and hearing
Phineas Gage – famous patient
The Neuron
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Distribution of neurons in the adult human central nervous system.
(Based on data of R. W. Williams & Herrup, 1988) 22
Parts of a neuron
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How neurons communicate
(1) Action potentials
Electrical signal arising in
a neuron’s axon
Along the axons of each neuron
A combination of chemical and electrical processes
(2) Synaptic transmission
Across the gap of neurons
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Action Potential in Graph
Resting potential: The measure of
the electrical charge across a neural
membrane when the neuron is not
processing information
The initiation of an action potential
needs a stimulus that pushes the
voltage across the membrane above
a certain threshold (threshold
potential)
Ion
channels then open and
depolarization occurs, leading to
exchange of ions, spiking of voltage
and propagation of electric signal
Propagation of Action Potential
An action potential travels down the axon, the
stimulation at point X stimulates the action at point X+1
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Action potential in cats
Hubel and Wiesel’s cat experiment
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The role of myelin sheaths
Allows signal to travel faster and less interrupted.
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When it went wrong…
Multiple Sclerosis is a disease where
myelin is destructively removed from
around the axon which slows down
nerve impulses in a process known as
demyelination.
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Sir Charles Kuen Kao
高錕中大「腦智同護」服務
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Image from the J. David Gladstone Institutes
Neural conduction
Between 1 and 120 meters per second
Speed depends on diameter of neuron,
temperature, presence of myelin
How fast are YOUR neurons?
Nerve conduction velocity test
Or something simpler...
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How neurons communicate
(1) Action potentials
Electrical signal arising in
a neuron’s axon
Along the axons of each neuron
A combination of chemical and electrical processes
(2) Synaptic transmission
Across the gap of neurons
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Synapse - Point of communication
between two neurons
What gets transmitted:
- Excitatory message
- Inhibitory message
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Synapse and Neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters
Chemicalmessenger that communicates across a synapse
Why so many?
Some are very widespread and have general actions
through the brain:
Most frequent:glutamate (excitatory); learning and memory
2nd most frequent: GABA (inhibitory); gating information
transmission
But most are used in specific brain regions only and by
subsets of neurons
Thespecific role of neurotransmitters is the reason why we
can target different brain functions using different chemicals 38
Neurotransmitters
Acetylcholine (Ach)
Muscle movement
Memory
Autonomic nervous system
function
Cognitive functioning
Deficiency
Memory issues
Alzheimer’s disease
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Neurotransmitters
Epinephrine (adrenaline):
Influencesarousal
Prepare your body for extreme efforts, ‘alarm’ behaviours
Norepinephrine (noradrenaline):
Influences arousal and vigilance
Mobilises the brain and body for actions
Correlates with wakefulness, attention and memory recall
Hormones behind your “fight-or-flight” response
Increase heart rate, blood oxygen level, blood pressure
Neurotransmitters
Dopamine
Movement
Planning
Reward
Pleasure
Attention
Learning
Deficiency
Parkinson’s disease
Overproduction
Schizophrenia
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Neurotransmitters
Endorphins
Endogenous morphines
Pain suppression
Pleasurable feelings
Appetites
E.g. getting “high” with drugs
Morphine
Heroine
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Neurotransmitters
Glutamate
Influences excitation of brain activity
Learning
Memory formation
Deficiency
Exhaustion, Insomnia, lack of mental
energy
Overproduction
Overexcitation and death of neurons
Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease,
Multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, etc.
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Neurotransmitters
GABA (Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid)
Inhibitory
Calming
Control anxiety, stress and fear
Push-pull with glutamate
Deficiency
Anxiety, schizophrenia, autism spectrum
disorder, depression, etc.
Overproduction
Drowsiness and daytime sleepiness
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Neurotransmitters
Adenosine
Influences inhibition of brain activity
Promote sleep
Suppress arousal
Caffeine and adenosine (from L4)
Caffeine is similar to adenosine in structure and compete with
adenosine for adenosine receptors
Intake of caffeine leads to reduction of inhibition = excitation
Chronic caffeine intake leads to increased density of
adenosine receptor as the body compensates. Also adenosine
sensitivity increases. (tolerance)
Abrupt cessation of caffeine intake leads to more receptors
for adenosine to bind to than baseline condition, leading to
exhaustion and headache (withdrawal)
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Neurotransmitters
Serotonin
Sleeping
Eating
Mood
Impulse control
Depression
E.g.Prozac increases serotonin and helps cure
depression
Deficiency: Impulsivity, OCD-like symptoms
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Nootropics (‘smart drugs’) and
neurotransmitters
Nootropics
Drugs that seek to enhance cognitive abilities
Target neural mechanisms involving neurotransmitters
Enhance neurotransmitter synthesis
Suppress breakdown of neurotransmitter
Increase neurotransmitter receptor density
Facilitate release of neurotransmitter
Examples:
Choline: Increase Ach and improve memory
Ritalin: Increase dopamine and norepinephrine
Note: These drugs impact the delicate neurochemical balance
in your nervous system and should only be taken with
professional medical opinions
Misuse can lead to neurotransmitter deficiency and overproduction
Summary
Neurons serve to transmit and process information
Neuralinformation travels by two main
mechanisms: the action potential and synaptic
transmission
Different neurotransmitters control different
aspects of behavior, allowing us to create drugs
that affect different functions
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The Brain
Live brain
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHxyP-nUhUY 49
Localization of Brain Functions
Clinical Observation
Dr. Paul Broca had a patient who due to some
accident could not say anything other than the word
“tan,” although the patient could still understand
language. When Dr. Broca examined the patient’s
brain after his death, he found that substantial
damage to the front left side. This observation led
him to conclude that this particular region was
important for speech. This area of brain is called
Broca’s area and his theory has survived to this day.
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Brain and evolution
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Brain and development
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The Brain Stem
The Cerebellum
The Subcortical Structures
Cerebral Cortex
Mapping the Somatosensory and
Motor Cortices
Forebrain, Midbrain and Hindbrain
Forebrain is NOT the front of
the brain!
Forebrain:
• Cerebrum
• Thalamus
• Hypothalamus
Midbrain:
• Connects the thalamus of
the forebrain and pons of
the hindbrain
Hindbrain:
• Pons
• Cerebellum
• Medulla
Hindbrain is evolutionarily
oldest, while forebrain the
newest
Prefrontal Cortex
Clinical Observation
Phineas Gage was a railway construction worker. On 13th. September 1848, an
accidental explosion of a dynamite blew an iron through his head. The iron
went in first under his left cheek bone and completely out through the top of
his head. most of the front part of the left side of his brain was
destroyed. Amazingly, he was able to walk and remained conscious. 10 weeks
later he returned home, and he even returned to work some more months
later.
However, Phineas was not the same person after the accident. Before the
accident, he was their most capable and efficient worker. After the accident, he
was very hard to get along, and he could not hold the job that he once had. He
returned home, lived with his mother before his death about 10 years after the
accident. (Other records said he went to Chile and worked as a
stagecoach driver, and the personality change was
not as drastic as suggested by many)
After his death, his skull was studied carefully so we now know which area of
the brain was damaged exactly, and the function of that area of the brain.
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Prefrontal Cortex
fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging): a technique for
revealing blood flow and therefore brain activity by comparing
successive MRI scans, MRI shows brain anatomy, fMRI shows
brain function.
When participants lied about a playing card they held in their
hand, fMRI revealed increased activity in two brain areas.
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Peripheral nervous system
The nerves exiting the CNS
that carry sensory and
motor information into
and from the body
Spinal cord: A long
cylinder of neural tissue
extending from the
medulla of the brain to the
middle of the back
Summary
Correspondence between your brain & behavior
e.g. skin sensitivity / motor skills and somatosensory / motor
cortex organization
The brain practices division of labor
Different neurotransmitters
Functions of different brain regions
The brain can change. So can us.
Does the understanding of the brain make us less
amazing?
Don’t take a normal brain for granted!
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Readings
Required
Chapter 4
Optional readings
See course website
Neuroscience information on APS website
http://www.psychologicalscience.org/?s=neuroscience
Navigating in the brain
Atlas of the Human Brain: interactive demos and brain
sections http://www.thehumanbrain.info/
Harvard University Human Brain Atlas: normal and diseased
brain scans http://www.med.harvard.edu/aanlib/home.html
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See you next time!
And good luck with the mid-term!
Questions welcome