1 / 27

The Biological Perspective

The Biological Perspective. Chapter 2. The Nervous System. Neurons – basic cell that makes up the nervous system and that receives and sends messages within that system. The Neuron. Dendrites – branchlike structures that receive messages from other neurons

isaiah
Télécharger la présentation

The Biological Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Biological Perspective Chapter 2

  2. The Nervous System • Neurons – basic cell that makes up the nervous system and that receives and sends messages within that system

  3. The Neuron • Dendrites – branchlike structures that receive messages from other neurons • The dendrite is connected to a soma – or a cell body of the neuron responsible for maintaining the life of the cell

  4. The Neuron • Axon – fiber attached to the soma and carries the neural message to other cells • Myelin – fatty substances that coat the axons of neurons to insulate, protect, and speed up the neural impulse

  5. Depolarization • Electrical charge – like dominos falling • Action potential – impulse is now in action rather than at rest • Each action potential sequence takes about one-thousandth of a second • 2 miles per hour to 270 miles per hour • Hands - slaps

  6. The Neuron • Axon terminals – branches at the end of the axon • At the end of the axon terminals, there are synaptic vesicles – saclike structures found inside the synaptic know containing chemicals

  7. The Neuron • Neurotransmitter – chemical found in the synaptic vesicles that, when released, has an effect on the next cell • The synapse reaches the end of the nerve, and sends the neurotransmitters through little locks called receptor sites

  8. Central Nervous System (CNS) • Brain and Spinal cord • Life-sustaining functions of the body – also thought, emotion, and behavior • Without each other, they would be useless

  9. Peripheral Nervous System • All the nerves and neurons that are not contained in the CNS • Communicates with the eyes, ears, skin, and mouth

  10. Divisions of the PNS • Somatic Nervous System – skeletal muscles, voluntarily • Autonomic Nervous System – not voluntarily control – breathing digestion, heart rate, hormones

  11. Fight or flight response • Anything that gets your heart pumping – autonomic arousal VIDEO

  12. Endocrine Glands • System of ductless glands that secrete their chemicals directly into the bloodstream for fast distribution • Endocrine glands secrete chemicals called hormones (“to excite”) Project then quiz

  13. Studying the brain • How do we study it? • Brain-dead people • Animals – anesthetized • Deep lesioning – inserting a thin, insulated wire into the brain and sending an electrical current that destroys brain cells

  14. Safer ways to study • CT scan – computed tomography – mapping • MRI – Magnetic resonance imaging – 3D • PET scan – radioactive glucose to detect activity • Page 55

  15. Neuroplasticity • The brains ability to constantly change both structure and function of many cells in response to experience or trauma • Old ones die or are damaged, the brain can adapt and form new functions

  16. Neuroplasticity leads to… • Stem cells – special cells found in all the tissues of the body that are capable of becoming other cell types when those cells need to be replaced due to damage or wear and tear • Found in organs, bone marrow, placentas • Very controversial – video - edmodo

  17. What does each part of the brain do!? • Hypothalamus • Hippocampus • Medulla • Thalamus • Cerebellum • Cerebral cortex • Corpus callosum

  18. How does the left differ from the right?! • Class demonstration • Both have four lobes

  19. Mirror Neurons • Read page 64 • Answer • Discuss • Quiz

  20. DNA • 23 + 23 = 46 • Dominant and recessive • Predispositions – not guaranteed, but a possibility • Look at your family tree…

  21. Hitler • Was Hitler born that way, or did something happen to make him the person he was?

  22. Nature vs. Nurture • Nature – genetic traits and inherited characteristics • Nurture – the environmental factors that surround us throughout our lives and influence our development • Class demonstration discussion page 69

  23. What influences you?

  24. Siblings • Are you different than your siblings?

  25. Twins • Read of James Lewis and James Springer on pg 68 • Adoption studies – more than 20 years found that adopted children share more similarities with their biological parents than their adoptive parents • Class demonstration page 68

  26. Charles Darwin Quiz • Evolution • Natural Selection – traits and behaviors that provide a survival advantage are more likely than other characteristics to be passed on to future generations

More Related