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The Biological Approach

The Biological Approach. Sweat Levels

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The Biological Approach

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  1. The Biological Approach Sweat Levels There are approximately 2 million sweat glands in the body, and are used to cool the body down when we get hot. The sweat glands in our skin are connected to the sympathetic nervous system, and when stimulated produce sweat. The amount of sweat produced depends upon our state of emotions and physical activity. Biological Changes in the Body

  2. Anatomy of the skin

  3. Galvanic Skin Response This is a method of measuring the electrical resistance of the skin, the theory being that the more nervous the person is, the more sweat they produce and the less resistance their skin has. The method has been under much criticism for it’s inaccuracy in measuring exactly what a person is reacting to. The method doesn’t target why a person is now sweating in relation to a simple true or false question. The person could be simply nervous, tired, easily startled and generally have clammy hands and the response measured would indicate that they were lying. Uses: in polygraph machines, common place in hypnotherapy

  4. fMRI Recent discovery that offers a non-invasive reports of neural activity providing high resolution images using functional magnetic resonance imaging. In laymen's terms fMRI is based on the increase of blood flow to areas of the brain, its main advantage being that it can image brain activity related to a specific task or sensory process. It has excelled over various other scans including PET scans, as there is no need to inject radioactive isotopes, and imaging time is far quicker and resolution of the image is superior. It can be used to possibly explain certain reactions in individuals and also to explain behaviours by seeing which parts of the brain are active when that behaviour is displayed. It has very good reliability, extremely consistent and has no real ethical problems associated with it.

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