Neuroscience test 3

  1. What is the RAS
    • Reticular Activating System 
    • Involved in sensory intake and encoding 
    • RAS decides what goes to the cortex (consciousness)
    • Activates in response to vision, hearing, touch, and taste (not smell)
  2. Three major components of the RAS
    • Reticular formation: Arousal states
    • Pons: Arousal states and sensory input
    • Thalamus: Sensory information
  3. How does the RAS work?
    • RAS takes sensory input and gives it to thalamus
    • Thalamus distributes everything to the proper brain regions
  4. RAS and amygdala
    • Amygdala helps decide if things are meaningful/relevant enough to go to cortex
    • After amygdala and RAS: information must be emotionally arousing enough to go to consciousness (too little or too much, goes back to unconscious)
  5. RAS research
    • Control: positive emotions
    • Exp.: negative emotions
    • Emotions were induced by showing participants either happy or angry faces before giving them a list of words to memorize and recall
    • Results: learning was better in happy face condition than angry face condition
    • Happy faces: greater cortex activation, fMRI showed different activity in happy face group
    • Angry faces: lower cortex activity
    • Found that learning is better when it reaches conscious awareness
  6. 3 components of the dopamine reward pathway
    • PFC 
    • Nucleus Accumbens (NAcc): motivation and goal directed behavior
    • Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA): dopamine production area
  7. DRP in memory
    • Amygdala provides emotional context (good vs bad)
    • Hippocampus wants to send information to MTL to remember things
    • If something is bad, and there is not enough dopamine, DPR will not activate 
    • Lack of dopamine tells hippocampus to either forget the experience or remember it as bad 
    • Sometimes the PFC adds conscious awareness, but sometimes this process is unconscious
  8. Dopamine's role in learning
    • Can help judge choices
    • Dopamine release increases when first making a choice. If the choice was good the dopamine goes up, bad choice dopamine goes down
    • Important to get feedback and constructive comments quickly to fix mistakes and get dopamine reward
  9. Neuroplasticity (patterning) types
    • Pruning- refinement in neural connections, occurs in learning circuits
    • Addition/subtraction of myelin-Less common, speeds up/slows down signal 
    • Strengthening/weakening pf synaptic connections- add more neurotransmitters/receptors, or take away if weakening
  10. Computer games in learning
    • have features that improve learning and reward pathway
    • Uses dopamine pathway 
    • Usually have right level of: challenge, instant feedback, stress, emotions
  11. Amygdala lesion study
    • monkeys
    • lesioning the amygdala resulted in emotional blunting 
    • Klucer-Bucy syndrome- emotional processing compromised
  12. Amygdala fear conditioning research
    • Amygdala damage/lesions cause participants to no longer learn fear 
    • Used GSR- no measure if you lack amygdala function
  13. Amygdala fear conditioning detection task
    • Images: Snakes/spiders-fear 
    • Flowers/mushrooms-no fear
    • Participants were shown consecutive images, some they had seen previously and some they had not 
    • Participants has to push button when they saw a picture they had been previously shown 
    • Faster at pushing button for the fear images than non fear 

    • Evidence of two brain circuits related to visual detection: 
    • Fast path: thalamus --> amygdala 
    • Slow path: thalamus --> PFC
  14. Amygdala fear conditioning task 2
    • Participants only shown snakes and spiders 
    • Images shown subliminally (10 ms presentations) 
    • GSR measured higher when image of snakes/spiders on screen, even though the participant did not consciously see them 

    Results: fear processing happens subliminally 

    Arachophobes had strong GSR with spiders than snakes, vice versa
  15. Insula (insular cortex)
    Processing/interpreting pain and taste 

    (taste aversion and disgust)
  16. Orbital frontal cortex
    • 1. Interpreting value 
    • How much something is worth to you in context 

    • 2. Medial region
    • Something being pleasant or desirable 

    • 3. Lateral region
    • Unpleasant or undesirable 

    Study: peoples reactions to wine was based off price. People rated expensive wines as more desirable
  17. Anterior cingulate
    • 1. Value of a response 
    • What you do next, and will it result in punishment or reward

    2. thalamus sends signal to anterior cingulate (pain signal)
  18. Ventral Striatum/ NAcc
    • 1. Reward pathway 
    • Emotional attachment/detachment to rewards 

    2. Dorsal region-sensorimotor processing related to habits or forming habits 

    3. Ventral region-ties emotional habit formation/social interactions/monetary value (emotional processing)
  19. What brain regions are activated when there is a moral violation
    • amygdala 
    • insula

    • Also:
    • orbiotfrontal cortex
    • PFC
  20. What occurs when brain legions associated with moral reasoning are lesioned?
    • Social functioning decreases
    • Ability to feel embarrassment, empathy, guilt decreases
  21. Moral dilemma study
    • Participants asked to respond to hypothetical scenarios:
    • Trolley
    • Foot bridge
    • Lifeboat
    • Hospital

    • Results: 
    • Trolley-most people would pull the lever to save the 5 people 

    Lifeboat/footbridge-divided on what to do 

    Hospital-almost no one said they would sacrifice one to save 5

    • The more physically active in the scenario the participant is, the less likely they are to take action
    • Different emotional responses in different areas of the brain
  22. Moral dilemmas in association with brain damage
    Damage to PFC, cingulate, amygdala changes judgement

    People with these damages cannot reason normally/would see all moral dilemmas as the same
  23. Decision making in PFC
    • Damage to PFC decreases decision making 
    • Increases impulsive behaviors
    • Decreases emotions
  24. Phineas Gage and what we learned
    • Railroad spike through the head 
    • Complete lack of emotions and self report feelings of pleasure 
    • Rationality impaired/made bad decisions

    This tells us that emotions and logical thinking go together
  25. Dictator game
    • Normal subjects and those with PFC damage
    • Told that if they were given money they could split it with the others in their group or keep it all for themselves
    • Normal subjects-majority shared 
    • PFC patients-no sharing
  26. Trust game
    • Normal participants and PFC patients 
    • Given money and told that they could keep all the money or share some with the trustee
    • If they gave to the trustee, it would triple in value and the trustee would give you a portion of it back 
    • PFC damage-would not share 
    • Normal participants-split the money

    Results: PFC leads to a lack of trust, whereas normal participants trusted
  27. Classroom implications for the RAS
    • Harder to learn when you are scared-being called on/making mistakes can cause fear
    • Yelling'shaming decreases amount of information being retained in the cortex
    • Gorup work can make people more comfortable 
    • Have to perk students interest, but not too much or they will not remember information
Author
BagelHyrax
ID
343328
Card Set
Neuroscience test 3
Description
Neuroscience test 3
Updated