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Module 4

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Title: Module 4


1
Module 4
  • Incredible Nervous System

2
GENES EVOLUTION
  • Genetic information
  • Brain/body develop according to complex chemical
    instructions written in a human cell no larger
    than a grain of sand
  • Fertilization
  • Zygote
  • Chromosomes
  • Chemical alphabet
  • Genes and proteins
  • Polymorphic genes
  • Dominant and recessive genes
  • Genome

3
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Fertilization
  • Human life has its beginnings when the fathers
    sperm, which contains 23 chromosomes, penetrates
    the mothers egg, which contains 23 chromosomes

4
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
5
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Zygote
  • The largest human cell, about the size of a grain
    of sand
  • A zygote is a cell that results when an egg is
    fertilized
  • A zygote contains 46 chromosomes arranged in 23
    pairs

6
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Chromosomes
  • A short, rod-like, microscopic structure that
    contains a tightly coiled strand of the chemical
    DNA, which is an abbreviation for
    deoxyribonucleic acid

7
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
8
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Chemical alphabet
  • Each chromosome contains a long, coiled strand of
    DNA, which resembles a ladder that has been
    twisted over and over upon itself
  • Each rung of the DNA ladder is made up of four
    chemicals
  • The order in which the four different chemicals
    combine to form rungs creates a microscopic
    alphabet

9
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
10
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Genes and proteins
  • Gene
  • specific segment on the long strand of DNA that
    contains instructions for making proteins
  • Proteins
  • chemical building blocks from which all the parts
    of the brain and body are constructed

11
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Polymorphic genes
  • Gene that has more than one version (e.g. eye
    color)
  • Combination of genes sibling receives from
    parents, resulting in two siblings having
    different eye colors
  • Dominant and recessive genes
  • Dominant gene polymorphic gene that determines
    the development of a specific trait even if
    paired with a recessive gene
  • Recessive gene polymorphic gene that determines
    the development of a specific trait only when
    inherited from both parents

12
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Genome
  • The Human Genome Project
  • Began in 1995 and cost over 2.7 billion
  • Reached its first goal in 2003 of mapping all the
    human genes
  • Researchers found only about 30,000 human genes
    instead of the estimated 100,000

13
GENES EVOLUTION (CONTD)
  • Genetic factors
  • Researchers are discovering how genetic factors
    interact with the environment in the development
    of mental retardation, emotional and personality
    traits, mental disorders, and various cognitive
    abilities
  • Fragile X syndrome
  • An inherited developmental disability due to a
    defect in the X chromosome
  • Genetic testing
  • Involves taking a blood, hair, skin, or other
    sample and then examining donors genes to look
    for specific diseases or disorders

14
EVOLUTION OF THE HUMAN BRAIN
  • Evolution of the human brain
  • 1859, Charles Darwin published The Origin of
    Species
  • Theory of evolution
  • Different species arose from a common ancestor
    and that those species that survived were best
    adapted to meet the demands of their environment
  • Humans and chimpanzees share at least 98 of
    their DNA

15
EVOLUTION OF THE HUMAN BRAIN (CONTD)
16
EVOLUTION OF THE HUMAN BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Genetic mutations
  • Accidental errors in genetic instructions that
    lead to a change
  • Natural selection
  • Genes for traits that help an organism survive
    and reproduce (adaptive genes) will be selected
    and will continue in a species
  • Genes for traits that prevent survival and
    reproduction (maladaptive genes) wont be
    selected and will be eliminated in a species

17
EVOLUTION OF THE HUMAN BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Adaptations
  • Common features of a species that provide it with
    improved function
  • Evolutionary approach
  • Voluntary ideas, such as adaptation and natural
    selection, explain human behaviors and mental
    processes

18
STUDYING THE LIVING BRAIN
  • Brain scans
  • Techniques that can look through the thick skull
    and picture the brain with astonishing clarity
    yet cause no damage to the extremely delicate
    brain cells
  • Researchers are mapping a variety of cognitive
    functions
  • attention, language, memory, motor skills
  • sites of emotional feelings and appetite
  • MRI and fMRI

19
STUDYING THE LIVING BRAIN (CONTD)
  • MRI and fMRI
  • MRI
  • magnetic resonance imagery
  • involves passing nonharmful radio frequencies
    through the brain
  • fMRI
  • functional magnetic resonance imaging
  • measures the activity of specific neurons that
    are functioning during cognitive tasks, such as
    thinking, listening

20
STUDYING THE LIVING BRAIN (CONTD)
21
STUDYING THE LIVING BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Brain scans and cognitive neuroscience
  • PET scan
  • Positron emission tomography
  • Involves injecting a slightly radioactive
    solution into the blood and then measuring the
    amount of radiation absorbed by brain cells
    called neurons

22
STUDYING THE LIVING BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Neuroimaging
  • PET and fMRI scans are used to identify and map
    the living brains neural activity as a person
    performs complex behavioral and cognitive tasks,
    such as
  • seeing
  • moving
  • thinking
  • speaking
  • empathizing
  • trusting
  • even reacting to TV violence

23
STUDYING THE LIVING BRAIN (CONTD)
24
The Nervous System
25
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN
  • Divisions of the nervous system
  • Major divisions of the nervous system
  • Central nervous system (CNS)
  • Peripheral nervous system (PNS)

26
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Central nervous system (CNS)
  • Made up of the brain and spinal cord
  • Bottom of brain is where spinal cord emerges
  • Made up of neurons, bundles of axons, and
    dendrites that carry information back and forth
    between the brain and the body

27
Central Nervous System
  • The Brain and spinal cord
  • CNS

28
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
29
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
  • Includes all the nerves that extend from the
    spinal cord and carry messages to and from
    various muscles, glands, and sense organs located
    throughout the body
  • Subdivisions of the PNS
  • Somatic nervous system
  • Autonomic nervous system (ANS)
  • Sympathetic division
  • Parasympathetic division

30
Peripheral Nervous System
  • All nerves that are not encased in bone.
  • Everything but the brain and spinal cord.
  • Is divided into two categories.somatic and
    autonomic.

31
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
32
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Somatic nervous system
  • Network of nerves that connect either to sensory
    receptors or to muscles that you can move
    voluntarily, such as muscles in your limbs, back,
    neck, and chest
  • Nerves contain two kinds of fibers
  • afferent
  • sensory fibers carry information to the brain
  • efferent
  • motor fibers carry information from brain or
    spinal cord to the muscles

33
Somatic Nervous System
  • Controls voluntary muscle movement.
  • Uses motor (efferent) neurons.

34
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Autonomic nervous system (ANS)
  • Regulates heart rate, breathing, blood pressure,
    digestion, hormone secretion, and other functions
  • Sympathetic division
  • triggered by threatening or challenging physical
    or psychological stimuli, increases physiological
    arousal and prepares the body for action
  • Parasympathetic division
  • returns the body to a calmer, relaxed state and
    is involved in digestion

35
Autonomic Nervous System
  • Controls the automatic functions of the body.
  • Divided into two categoriesthe sympathetic and
    the parasympathetic

36
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Major parts of the brain
  • Forebrain
  • Midbrain
  • Hindbrain
  • pons
  • medulla
  • cerebellum

37
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
38
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Forebrain
  • Largest part of the brain
  • Has right and left sides called hemispheres
  • Hemispheres are responsible for a number of
    functions, including learning and memory,
    speaking and language, emotional responses,
    experiencing sensations, initiating voluntary
    movements, planning, and making decisions

39
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Midbrain
  • Has a reward or pleasure center, which is
    stimulated by food, sex, money, music, looking at
    attractive faces, and some drugs (cocaine)
  • Has areas for visual and auditory reflexes
  • Contains the reticular formation, which arouses
    the forebrain so that its ready to process
    information from the senses

40
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Hindbrain
  • Has three distinct structures
  • pons
  • medulla
  • cerebellum

41
ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Pons
  • Functions as a bridge to interconnect messages
    between the spinal cord and brain
  • Medulla
  • Located on top of the spinal cord
  • Includes a group of cells that control vital
    reflexes, such as respiration, heart rate, and
    blood pressure
  • Cerebellum
  • Located in the very back and underneath the brain
  • Involved in coordinating motor movements but not
    in initiating voluntary movements

42
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES
  • Wrinkled cortex
  • A thin layer of cells that essentially covers the
    entire surface of the forebrain

43
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
44
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Four lobes
  • Frontal lobe
  • Parietal lobe
  • Occipital lobe
  • Temporal lobe

45
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
46
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Frontal lobe
  • Involved with personality, emotions, and motor
    behaviors
  • Parietal lobe
  • Involved with perception and sensory experiences
  • Occipital lobe
  • Involved with visual processing
  • Temporal lobe
  • Involved with hearing and speaking

47
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Anencephaly
  • Condition of being born with little or no brain
  • If some brain or nervous tissue is present, its
    totally exposed and often damaged because the top
    of the skull is missing
  • Survival is limited to days

48
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
49
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Frontal lobe functions
  • Located in front part of brain
  • Includes huge area of cortex
  • Many functions
  • voluntary motor movements, interpreting and
    performing emotional behaviors, behaving normally
    in social situations, maintaining a healthy
    personality, paying attention to things in the
    environment, making decisions, executing plans
  • executive functions

50
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Phineas Gage
  • Frontal lobotomy
  • A surgical procedure in which about one-third of
    the front part of the frontal lobe is cut away
    from the rest of the brain

51
Ways to study the Brain!!!
  • Accidents Phineas Gage.

52
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
53
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Frontal lobe functions
  • Motor cortex
  • Narrow strip of cortex thats located on the back
    edge of the frontal lobe and extends down its
    side
  • Involved in the initiation of all voluntary
    movements
  • Right side controls left
  • Left side controls right
  • Organization and function of motor cortex

54
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
55
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Other functions of frontal lobe
  • Much knowledge of other frontal lobe functions
    comes from individuals who had damage to that
    area
  • Frontal lobes are involved in paying attention,
    organizing, planning, deciding, and carrying out
    various cognitive tasks and social-emotional
    behaviors
  • Executive function

56
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Parietal lobe function
  • Location of somatosensory cortex
  • Narrow strip of cortex thats located on the
    front edge of the parietal lobe and extends down
    its side

57
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
58
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
59
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Other functions of parietal lobe
  • Sensory integration
  • Spatial orientation
  • Language abilities
  • Visual and auditory attention
  • Memory
  • Numerical processing (counting)

60
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Temporal lobe functions
  • Primary auditory cortex
  • Located on top edge of each temporal lobe,
    receives electrical signals from receptors in the
    ears and transforms these signals into meaningful
    sound sensations, such as vowels and consonants

61
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
62
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Temporal lobe functions
  • Auditory association area
  • Located directly below the primary auditory
    cortex
  • Transforms basic sensory information, such as
    noises or sounds, into recognizable auditory
    information, such as words or music

63
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Temporal lobe functions
  • Brocas area
  • located in left frontal lobe
  • necessary for combining sounds into words and
    arranging words into meaningful sentences
  • damage Brocas aphasia
  • person cant speak in fluent sentences but can
    understand written and spoken words

64
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Wernickes area
  • located in the left temporal lobe
  • necessary for speaking in coherent sentences and
    for understanding speech
  • damage Wernickes aphasia
  • Difficulty understanding spoken or written words
    and difficulty putting words into meaningful
    sentences

65
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
66
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Occipital lobe functions
  • Vision
  • Primary visual cortex
  • Located at the very back of the occipital lobe
  • Receives electrical signals from receptors in the
    eyes and transforms these signals into
    meaningless, basic visual sensations, such as
    lights, lines, shadows, colors, and textures

67
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
68
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Occipital lobe functions
  • Visual association area
  • Transforms basic sensations, such as lights,
    lines, colors, and textures, into complete,
    meaningful visual perceptions, such as people,
    objects, or animals

69
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Visual agnosia
  • Individual fails to recognize some object,
    person, or color
  • Has ability to see and even describe pieces or
    parts of some visual stimulus

70
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
71
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
  • Neglect syndrome
  • Refers to the failure of a patient to see objects
    or parts of the body on the side opposite the
    brain damage
  • May dress only on one side of body
  • May deny that opposite body parts are theirs

72
CONTROL CENTERS FOUR LOBES (CONTD)
73
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN
  • Group of about half a dozen interconnected
    structures that make up the core of the forebrain
  • Involved with regulating many motivational
    behaviors, such as obtaining food, drink, and sex
  • Organizing emotional behaviors, such as fear,
    anger, and aggression storing memories
  • Structures and functions
  • Hypothalamus
  • Amygdala
  • Thalamus
  • Hippocampus

74
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
75
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Hypothalamus
  • Regulates many motivational behaviors, including
    eating, drinking, and sexual responses emotional
    behaviors, such as arousing the body when
    fighting or fleeing and secretion of hormones,
    such as occurs at puberty
  • Amygdala
  • Located in the tip of the temporal lobe
  • Receives input from all the senses
  • Evaluates the emotional significance of stimuli
    and facial expressions, especially those
    involving fear, distress, or threat

76
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Thalamus
  • Gathers and processes information from the senses
  • Involved in receiving sensory information, doing
    some initial processing, and then relaying the
    sensory information to areas of the cortex
  • Hippocampus
  • Curved structure inside the temporal lobe
  • Involved in saving many kinds of fleeting
    memories by putting them into permanent storage
    in various parts of the brain

77
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Sympathetic
  • Parasympathetic

78
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
79
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Sympathetic
  • triggered by threatening or challenging physical
    or psychological stimuli
  • Fight or flight
  • state of increased physiological arousal caused
    by activation of the sympathetic division
  • helps body cope and survive threatening
    situations
  • Physiological responses
  • increased heart rate, increased blood pressure,
    and dilated pupils

80
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Parasympathetic
  • decreases physiological arousal
  • returns body to a calmer, more relaxed state
  • stimulates digestion during eating
  • Physiological responses
  • decreases heart rate
  • lowers blood pressure
  • stimulates digestion
  • body returns to more relaxed state

81
LIMBIC SYSTEM OLD BRAIN (CONTD)
  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Homeostasis
  • sympathetic and parasympathetic systems work
    together to keep the bodys level of arousal in
    balance for optimum functioning

82
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM
  • Endocrine system
  • Made up of numerous glands located throughout the
    body
  • Glands secrete various chemicals called hormones
  • pituitary
  • pancreas
  • thyroid
  • adrenal glands
  • gonads

83
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM (CONTD)
84
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM (CONTD)
  • Pituitary gland
  • Hangs below the hypothalamus
  • Divided into anterior and posterior
  • Posterior (rear portion)
  • Regulates water and salt balance
  • Anterior (front portion)
  • Regulates growth through secretion of growth
    hormone
  • Produces hormones that control the adrenal
    cortex, pancreas, thyroid, and pancreas

85
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM (CONTD)
86
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM (CONTD)
  • Pancreas
  • Regulates the level of sugar in the bloodstream
    by secreting insulin
  • Thyroid
  • Located in the neck
  • Regulates metabolism through secretion of
    hormones

87
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM (CONTD)
  • Adrenal glands
  • Adrenal cortex (outside part)
  • Secretes hormones that regulate sugar and salt
    balance
  • Adrenal medulla (inside part)
  • Secretes two hormones that arouse the body to
    deal with stress and emergencies
  • Epinephrine (adrenaline)
  • Norepinephrine (noradrenaline)

88
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM (CONTD)
  • Gonads
  • Females
  • ovaries produce hormones that regulate sexual
    development, ovulation, and growth of sex organs
  • Males
  • testes produce hormones that regulate sexual
    development, production of sperm, and growth of
    sex organs
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