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EPPP Physiological Psychology and Psychopharmacology Prep Exam All Questions Answered Correct.

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Neuron - Answer Specialized cell directly involved in mental processes and behavior Three distinct components of Neurons - Answer 1. Axons 2. Dendrites 3. Soma In its resting state, the inside of the cell is _____________ charged relative to the outside of the cell - Answer Negatively What causes a state of depolarization in neurons? - Answer When dendrites receive sufficient stimulation, sodium channels in membrane open which allows positively charged sodium ions to enter the cell Action potential - Answer a neural impulse; a brief electrical charge that travels down an axon Depolarization is followed by __________________, in which ___________ channels close and ______________ channels open, - Answer Repolarization; sodium; potassium All-or-none principle - Answer Whenever the stimulation received by a neuron exceeds a given threshold, the resulting action potential reaches the axon terminal Synaptic transmission - Answer Transmission of info from one nerve cell to another, involving the release of a neurotransmitter into the synaptic cleft Neurotransmitters - Answer Chemical substances that transmit signals form one neuron to another Acetylcholine - Answer A neurotransmitter that enables learning and memory and also triggers muscle contraction Two types of receptors on which Acetylcholine acts - Answer 1. Muscarinic 2. Nicotinic Dopamine - Answer Involved in regulation of movement, personality, mood, memory, and sleep Dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia - Answer Holds that schizophrenia is due to elevated dopamine levels or oversensitivity of dopamine receptors Dopamine in Tourette's Disorder - Answer Oversensitivity to or excessive dopamine in caudate nucleus contributes to Tourette's disorder Dopamine in Parkinsons' Disease - Answer Degeneration of Dopamine receptors in substantia nigra and nearby areas underlies tremors, muscle rigidity, and other motor symptoms of Parkinson's Disease

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Institution
EPPP CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Course
EPPP CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

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EPPP Physiological Psychology and
Psychopharmacology Prep Exam
2025-2026 All Questions Answered
Correct.
Neuron - Answer Specialized cell directly involved in mental processes and behavior

Three distinct components of Neurons - Answer 1. Axons

2. Dendrites

3. Soma

In its resting state, the inside of the cell is _____________ charged relative to the
outside of the cell - Answer Negatively

What causes a state of depolarization in neurons? - Answer When dendrites receive
sufficient stimulation, sodium channels in membrane open which allows positively
charged sodium ions to enter the cell

Action potential - Answer a neural impulse; a brief electrical charge that travels down
an axon

Depolarization is followed by __________________, in which ___________ channels
close and ______________ channels open, - Answer Repolarization; sodium;
potassium

All-or-none principle - Answer Whenever the stimulation received by a neuron
exceeds a given threshold, the resulting action potential reaches the axon terminal

Synaptic transmission - Answer Transmission of info from one nerve cell to another,
involving the release of a neurotransmitter into the synaptic cleft

Neurotransmitters - Answer Chemical substances that transmit signals form one
neuron to another

Acetylcholine - Answer A neurotransmitter that enables learning and memory and also
triggers muscle contraction

Two types of receptors on which Acetylcholine acts - Answer 1. Muscarinic

2. Nicotinic

Dopamine - Answer Involved in regulation of movement, personality, mood, memory,
and sleep

Dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia - Answer Holds that schizophrenia is due to
elevated dopamine levels or oversensitivity of dopamine receptors

Dopamine in Tourette's Disorder - Answer Oversensitivity to or excessive dopamine in

,Norepinephrine - Answer Plays important role in mood, attention, dreaming, learning,
and certain autonomic functions

Catecholamine hypothesis of depression - Answer Predicts that some forms of
depression are due to lower-than-normal levels of this neurotransmitter

Serotonin - Answer Exerts inhibitory effect and has been implicated in mood, hunger,
temperature regulation, sexual activity, arousal, sleep, aggression, and migraine
headache

Elevates levels of serotonin contribute to which clinical factors/disorders? - Answer 1.
Schizophrenia

2. Autism

3. Food restriction associated with Anorexia Nervosa

Low levels of Serotonin play a role in which clinical factors/disorders? - Answer 1.
Aggression

2. Depresison

3. Suicide

4. Bulimia nervosa

5. OCD

GABA - Answer Inhibitory neurotransmitter that plays a role in eating, seizure, anxiety
disorder, motor control, vision, and sleep

Low levels of GABA have been linked to ______________ - Answer Anxiety disorders

Glutamate - Answer Excitatory neurotransmitter that plays a role in learning and
memory, specifically playing a role in long-term potentiation

Endorphins - Answer Inhibitory neuromodulators that lower the sensitivity of
postsynaptic neurons to neurotransmitters; analgesic properties, implicated in
pleasurable experiences

Excessive glutamate receptor activity can result in _______________ and may
contribute to _________________________ - Answer 1. seizures

2. Stroke-related brain damage, Huntington's disease, and Alzheimer's disease

Two main parts of the Central Nervous System - Answer Brain and spinal cord

Spinal cord - Answer Carries information between the brain and the peripheral
nervous system, coordinates activities of the left and right sides of body, controls simple
reflexes that don't involve the brain

Afferent nerve fibers in spinal cord: location and type of message carried - Answer 1.
Located in the superior portion of the spinal cord, the dorsal horns

2. Sensory messages

,Damage at the cervical level of the spinal cord results in ________________ - Answer
Quadriplegia

Damage at the thoracic level of the spinal cord results in ________________ - Answer
Paraplegia

Three meninges of the CNS - Answer 1. Dura mater

2. Arachnoid

3. Pia mater

Hydrocephalus - Answer Caused by an obstruction of the flow of CSF that leads to
build-up of fluid and enlargement of ventricles

Ventricles and schizophrenia - Answer Larger-than-normal ventricles have been found
in some individuals with schizophrenia

Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) - Answer the sensory and motor neurons that
connect the central nervous system (CNS) to the rest of the body

Two subsystems of the Peripheral Nervous System - Answer 1. Somatic nervous
system

2. Autonomic nervous system

Somatic nervous system - Answer Governs activities that are ordinarily considered
voluntary; comprised of sensory nerves carrying info from sense receptors to the CNS
and motor nerves carrying info from CNS to skeletal muscles

Autonomic nervous system - Answer Governs activities that involuntary; comprised of
sensory nerves conveying signals from receptors in the viscera to the CNS and motor
nerves carrying signals from CNS to smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and glands

Two branches of the autonomic nervous system - Answer 1. Sympathetic

2. Parasympathetic

Sympathetic branch of autonomic nervous system - Answer Associated with arousal
and expenditure of energy

Parasympathetic branch of autonomic nervous system - Answer Involved in
conservation of energy and is active during digestion and periods of rest and relaxation

List five main stages of human brain development - Answer 1. Proliferation

2. Migration

3 Differentiation

4. Myelination

5. Synaptogenesis

Human brain development: Proliferation - Answer New cells are produced inside

, Human brain development: Differentiation - Answer Neurons develop axons and
dendrites

Human brain development: Myelination - Answer Axons of some neurons myelinate

Human brain development: Synaptogenesis - Answer Synapses form

Types of structural neuroimaging techniques - Answer 1. Computed tomography (CT)

2. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

Types of functional neuroimaging techniques - Answer 1. Positron-emission
tomography (PET)

2. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)

Structural neuroimaging techniques provide information on the _____________ of the
brain, while functional neuroimaging techniques provide information on
_________________ - Answer 1. Structure and function of the brain

2. Brain activity

Structures comprising the hindbrain - Answer 1. Medulla

2. Pons

3. Cerebellum

Medulla - Answer Influences flow of info between spinal cord and brain, regulates
breathing, heartbeat, blood pressure

Pons - Answer Connects two halves of cerebellum and plays a role in integration of
movements in the right and left sides of the body

Cerebellum - Answer important for balance, posture, and coordinated and refined
movement (in conjunction with basal ganglia and motor cortex)

Ataxia - Answer Slurred speech, severe, tremors, and lass of balance resulting from
damage to the cerebellum

Structures of the midbrain - Answer 1. Superior and inferior colliculi

2. Substantia nigra

3. Reticular formation

Superior colliculi - Answer Serve as routes for visual information

Inferior colliculi - Answer Serve as routes for auditory information

Reticular formation - Answer Involved in respiration, coughing, vomiting, posture,
locomotion, and REM sleep

Reticular activating system - Answer Part of reticular formation that is vital to
consciousness, arousal, and wakefulness

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Institution
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Course
EPPP CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

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