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Samenvatting Neuropsychology and Psychopharmacology

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Dit is een zeer volledige samenvatting waarbij de ppt's, het handboek en de notities in de les mee verwerkt zijn. In de samenvatting wordt er veel gebruik gemaakt van afbeeldingen (die ook uitgelegd worden) om de leerstof zo duidelijk mogen te maken. Het is een volledig document dat bij mij volstaa...

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  • Oui
  • 15 février 2021
  • 86
  • 2019/2020
  • Resume
  • neurowetenschappen
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Par: kevinpetre • 2 année de cela

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II. COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGY

0. INTRODUCTION
See also: Chapter 1

➢ Mind and brain: an empirical example of Penfield’s method




➢ Cognitive neuroscience aims to provide a brain-based account of cognitive and behavoirial
processes (perceiving, remembering, etc.)
o Made possible by technological advances in studying the brain that are safer and less
crude than, say, Penfield’s method
▪ E.g. brain damage, TMS, MRI, MEG, EEG


1. Historical foundations

➢ Philosophical approaches to mind and brain
o Do mental experiences arise in the heart (e.g. Aristotle) or brain (e.g. Plato)?
▪ Aristotle – the heart is the center of the soul and the brain is an organ that cools
the blood
o Mind-body problem: how can a physical substance (brain/body) give rise to mental
experience?
▪ Dualism: mind and body are separate substances (e.g. Descartes)
▪ Dual-aspect theory: mind and body are two levels of explanation of the same
thing (e.g. Spinoza)
▪ Reductionism: mind eventually explained solely in terms of physical/biological
theory (e.g. Churchland)

➢ Scientific approached to mind and brain
o Early anatomists believed the ventricles were important
o Cortex was often schematically drawn (top) or
misrepresented like intestines until 18th century
o Gall and Spurzheim (1810) provide an accurate depiction of the
features of the brain

,➢ Phrenology
o Assumptions
▪ Different parts of cortex serve different
functions
▪ Differences in personality traits manifest in
differences in cortical size and bumps on skull
▪ Crude division of psychological traits (e.g. ‘love
of animals’) and not grounded in science
o Lobes & maps of the brain




o Although phrenology is discredited, the notion that different regions of the brain serve
different functions has stood the test of time
o Modern cognitive neuroscience uses empirical methods to ascertain different functions
o It does not assume that each region has one function, or that each function has a discrete
location (unlike phrenology), but does assume some degree of functional
specialization

➢ Functional specialization: Broca’s observations
o ‘Tan’s lesion’

➢ Functional specialization: after Broca
o Wernicke later observed a patient with poor speech comprehension, but
good production
o Suggests at least two language faculties in the brain (comprehension vs. production) that
can be independently affected by brain damage
o This inference can be made without necessarily knowing where in the brain they are
located
= Cognitive neuropsychology

➢ Minds without brains: the computer metaphor
o Much of the 20th-century psychology was concerned with observations of behavior,
rather than observations of the brain during behavior
o This led to models of cognition that do not make direct reference to the brain, e.g. the
information-processing models popular from the 1950’s onwards
o The models were inspired by thinking of the mind as a series of routines, like those found
in computers




o Connectionist models are mathematical (computational) in nature but don’t involve serial
processing and discrete routines

,➢ The return of the brain: cognitive neuroscience
o 1970’s: structural imaging methods (CT, MRI) enable precise images of the brain (and
brain lesions)
o 1980’s: PET adapted to models of cognition developed by psychologists
o 1985: TMS is first used (a non-invasive, safer equivalent of Penfield’s earlier studies)
o 1990: level of oxygen in blood used as a measure of cognitive function (the principle
behind fMRI)




2. Methods of cognitive neuroscience

Method Type Invasiveness Brain property used

EEG/ERP Recording Noninvasive Electrical

Single-cell/ multi-unit Recording Invasive Electrical
recordings

TMS Stimulation Noninvasive Electromagnetic

tES Stimulation Noninvasive Electric

MEG Recording Noninvasive Magnetic

PET Recording Invasive Hemodynamic

FMRI Recording Noninvasive Hemodynamic

fMIRS Recording Noninvasive Hemodynamic

, 1. THE LESIONED AND STIMULATED BRAIN
See also: Chapter 5

➢ Mind and the lesioned brain: an example
o See video of Alien hand syndrome

➢ Mind and the lesioned brain: classical cases
o Tan – language
o DF – object recognition
o Phineas Gage – personality
o HM – memory

➢ Reverse engineering
o Infer the function of a region (or cognitive mechanism) by removing it and measuring the
effect on the rest of the system
▪ E.g. if damage to a region disrupts reading, but not speaking or seeing, then one
might conclude that the region is specialized for some aspect of processing text
o Disruption of brain function comes about through natural damage (e.g. stroke, trauma),
elicited damage (e.g. animal models), or harmless temporary changes induced electro-
magnetically (e.g. TMS)

1. Brain manipulation methods

➢ Taxonomy of brain manipulation methods
o




➢ Natural damage
o Neurosurgery




o Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA)
▪ A CVA or a stroke is an accident in the arteries (vascular) of the brain (cerebro)
▪ CVA in Belgium: 25.000 new victims/year, 15% dies, 50% of the stroke survivors
has long-lasting impairments

, ▪ Two types
• Ischemic infarction (80%)




• Hemorrhage or bleeding (20%)




o Traumatic brain injury (TBI)




▪ Various mechanical forces can result in
• Open traumatic brain injury: more localized effects
• Closed traumatic brain injury: more widespread effects




o Intracranial tumors
▪ Mass of new tissue that persists and grows independently
▪ Classification
• Benign vs. malign
• Encapsulated vs. infiltrating
• Primary vs. secondary

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