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Summary psychology: biological and cognitive behaviour (chapter 3)

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Chapter 3
Uploaded on
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SLK120 chapter 3
Learning goals:
-​ Identify the various parts of the neuron and the main functions of glial cells
-​ Describe the neural impulse, and explain how neurons communicate at chemical
synapses
-​ Discuss some of the functions of acetylcholine, the monoamine neurotransmitters, GABA
and endorphins
-​ distinguish between the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system
-​ Describe how lesioning, electrical stimulation and various brain-imaging procedures are
used to investigate brain function
-​ Summarise the main functions of the key structures in the brain
-​ Identify the four lobes in the cortex and state their key functions
-​ Summarise the evidence of the brains plasticity
-​ Explain how split-brain research changed our understanding of the brain's hemispheric
organisation
-​ Describe research on cerebral specialisation in normal subjects and what this research
has revealed
-​ Identify the key elements of the endocrine system
-​ Describe some ways in which hormones regulate behaviour




1

,Communication in the nervous system
1.​ Neurons = individual cells in the nervous system that receive, integrate and transmit
information
2.​ The soma, or cell body = contains the cell nucleus and much of the chemical
machinery common to most cells
3.​ Dendrites are the parts of a neuron that are specialised to receive information.
4.​ The axon is a long, thin fibre that transmits signals away from the soma to other neurons
or to muscles or glands
5.​ The myelin sheath is insulating material that encases some axons.
6.​ terminal buttons, which are small knobs that secrete chemicals called
neurotransmitters
7.​ A synapse is a junction where information is transmitted from one neuron to another
8.​ Glia are cells found throughout the nervous system that provide various types of support
for neurons
9.​ The resting potential of a neuron is its stable, negative charge when the cell is inactive
10.​synaptic cleft, a microscopic gap between the terminal button of one neuron and the
cell membrane of another neuron
11.​neurotransmitters – chemicals that transmit information from one neuron to another
12.​postsynaptic potential (PSP), a voltage change at a receptor site on a postsynaptic cell
membrane
13.​An action potential is a very brief shift in a neuron’s electrical charge that travels along
an axon
14.​The absolute refractory period is the minimum length of time after an action potential,
during which another action potential cannot begin
15.​reuptake, a process in which neurotransmitters are sponged up from the synaptic cleft
by the presynaptic membrane
16.​endorphins – internally produced chemicals that resemble opiates in structure and
effects



Nervous tissue: the basic hardware
-​ Nervous system is living tissue composed of cells (glia and neurons)



Neurons
-​ Individual cells in NS that receive, integrate and transmit info (mainly only with other
neurons)
-​ Minority receive signals from sensory organs or carry messages to muscles

-​ Soma contains nucleus and cytoplasm (rest of neuron devoted to handling info)
-​ Dendrites specialised to receive info



2

, -​ From dendrites, info flows into soma along axon (long thin fibre transmitting signals away
from soma to other
neurons or to
muscles/glands)
-​ Many axons wrapped in
myelin
-​ Myelin sheath is insulating
material encasing axons
to speed up transmission
of signals moving along
axons
-​ Myelin also stabilizes
axon structures and
patterns

-​ Axon ends in cluster of
terminal buttons that
secrete neurotransmitters
-​ Neurons interconnect at
synapses (junction where info is transmitted from one neuron to another)
-​ Info received from dendrites → pass through soma and along axon → transmitted to
dendrites of other cells at synapses



Glia
-​ Also in NS, smaller than neurons but more in numbers
-​ Supply nourishment to neurons, remove neuron waste products and provide insulation
around some axons
-​ Myelin sheaths made from special glial cells
-​ Might send and receive chemical signals
-​ Some detect neural impulses and send signals to other glial cells to then feed signals
back to neurons
-​ Modulate signalling of neurons by dampening or amplifying synaptic activity
-​ Shield synapses from ‘chatter’ of surrounding neuronal activity to enhance
signal-to-noise ratio in NS




3
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