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Lecture notes

understanding human behaviour, biological perspectives.

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in depth information about addictions, biological perspectives and cortical lateralisation. includes 8 pages full of information with facts and statistics and the main things you need to know.









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Uploaded on
March 26, 2024
Number of pages
2
Written in
2023/2024
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Dr michelle
Contains
All classes

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Biological perspectives



 Brain functions and structure, hormones, nerves
 How the mind effects behaviour.
 The study of biological basis of psychology processes and normal and abnormal behaviour.
 Senses and movements, emotion, sleep and biological rhythms, motivation, addiction,
learning and memory, cortical lateralisation.

History:

 Ancient Egyptians- preservation of liver, lungs, stomach and intestines in jars.
 Heart remained in the body.
 Brain was removed.
 Aristotle- Located mental capacities within the heart.
 Influenced language.
 Galen- treated gladiators- head injuries altered behaviour.
 RENE DESCARTES 1596-1650 dualism- body acts and responds like a machine.
 Mind is immaterial- grands free will.
 Origin of consciousness- pineal gland.
 THOMAS WILLIS 1621-1675- brain coordinates and controls behaviour.
 FRANZ GALL 1758- 1828 phrenology- localised area of function.
 Measures areas on skull to assess different qualities.

Research methods:

 Somatic interventions- effect of change on a structure or function of the brain on behaviour.
 E.g. administer a drug, stimulates or inhibits a region of the brain.
 Behavioural interventions- effect of change in behaviour on body structure or function.
 E.g. completion of training programmes.
 Correlations- assesses how change in one variable are associated with change in another
variable.
 E.g. assessing whether increases in testosterones are associated with increases in aggression.

Brain imaging techniques:

 Magnetic resonance imaging MRI- provides a high level of detail.
 See fine structures and detect subtle changes.
 Electroencephalography EEG- assesses change in voltage in the cortex.
 Very good resolution to the millisecond.
 Relatively mobile and cheap to use.
 Lengthy and uncomfortable.
 Low spatial resolution and only suitable for cortical activity.
 Functional magnetic resonance imaging FMRI- detects small changes in brain metabolism.
 Generates images in the brain’s activity in response to different stimuli.
 Expensive and low temporal resolution.
 Positron emission tomography PET- generate an image of the brain’s activity.
 Uses radioactively labelled glucose to assess changed in metabolism and blood flow.
 Able to detect changes in brain activity quickly.
 Less detailed than FMRI.
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