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Effects of Environment on Physiological Processes

Effects of Environment on Physiological Processes. Neuroplasticity. The brain’s ability to reorganize itself in response to the environment throughout the lifespan. Neuroplasticity. Experiences are powerful modifiers of the brain. Experiences that affect neuroplasticity are:

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Effects of Environment on Physiological Processes

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  1. Effects of Environment on Physiological Processes

  2. Neuroplasticity • The brain’s ability to reorganize itself in response to the environment throughout the lifespan.

  3. Neuroplasticity • Experiences are powerful modifiers of the brain. • Experiences that affect neuroplasticity are: • Stimulating environments • Sex hormones • Diet • Genetics • Stress

  4. Neuroplasticity • As behavior changes there must also be a corresponding change in the neural circuitry that produces behavior. • Neurogenisis- when new neurons are created in response to experience.

  5. Research on Stimulating Environments • Kolb (1999) • Compared rats placed in enriched environments for three months to rats placed in standard cages. • Enriched environments led to higher performance on a variety of behvioral tasks.

  6. Need to Tolerate Uncertainty • Can’t damage human brains in the lab. • Rats, mice, and primates are subjects in most neuroplasticity experiments. • We should not assume that human brains are plastic in the same ways as animals.

  7. Studies that deal with neuroplasticity. • Small and Vorgan (2008)- iBrain • Hull and Vaid (2006)- localization and bilingulaism

  8. Meet your iBrain • Digital Technology is not only changing the way we live and communicate, but is rapidly altering our brains. • As the brain evolves and shifts toward new technological skills, it drifts away from fundamental social skills.

  9. Meet your iBrain • Small and Vorgan study • Participants • Three digitally naive people in 50s and 60s • Three digital-savvy volunteers from the same age and socioeconomic group.

  10. Meet Your iBrain • Procedure • Participants were to perform an internet search task while receiving an fMRI. • Each group was also given a control task of reading information to be able to factor out other sources of brain stimulation. • After a baseline measurement was taken, both groups were asked to practice the search tasks for 1 hour a day for 5 days. • A second set of results was taken after 5 days.

  11. Meet your iBrain • Results • The brains of computer savvy and computer naïve subjects showed no difference on the control task. • In the baseline measurements, the computer savvy subjects showed distinctly different neural patterns than the naïve subjects. • After five days, the naïve subjects now had the same neural patterns as the savvy subjects.

  12. Concluding ideas about Neuroplasticity • Neuroplasticity occurs throughout the lifespan, though the brain is most plastic early in life. • Behavior changes occur AFTER neuroplasticy changes. • The brain can reorganize itself after injury. The brain spontaneously reorganizes itself right after injury so this is the best time for treatment.

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