Psyb64 PT 3
Psyb64 PT 3
Biorhythms
- Behaviours that occur at regular intervals in response to ‘biological clocks’
- What are some examples of biorhythms?
- Sleep and walking cycles follow circadian rhythms– repeat roughly every 23
hours
- Zeitgebers are stimuli that helps to establish and maintain biological rhythms
- ‘Zeit’ means ‘time’ in German, ‘gerber’ means to give
- What are some examples of zeitgebers?
- The human ‘free running’ circadian rhythm is 24.2 to 24.9 hrs… why?
Jet Lag
- Fatigue, irritability, sleepiness, digestion issues, headaches, loss of
concentration
- Jet lag is worse when traveling East
Daylight Savings
- Setting clocks back one hour in the fall (fall back) is a
phase advance
- Similar to westward (north american) travel and produces little
disruption
- Setting clocks forward one hour in the spring (spring forward) is a phase
day
- Similar to eastward (north american) travel and jet lag
- Did you know? Daylight saving time was created to help save energy
during WWI
SCN… is independent
- The SCN can generate and maintain circadian rhythms independent of input
from other structures
Experimental findings
- Isolated SCN tissue cultures show activity fluctuations consistent with the
donor’s sleep-wake cycle
- Transplants of SCN tissue result in the host adopting the day-night cycle of the
original host
- High levels of per and tim proteins inhibit the production of clock
- Low levels of per and tim proteins disinhibit the production of Clock
- Clock increases the production of per and tim
Remember: The SCN is only active during the day; at night, reduced SCN activity
causes the pineal gland to produce and release melatonin
- Therefore, melatonin levels:
- Are suppressed by light and very low during the day
- Begin to rise in the hours before sleep
- Peak around 4am
- Blindness, pineal gland tumors, and certain medications can interfere
with sleep by affecting melatonin
- Bright lights also interfere with sleep by affecting melatonin!
Melatonin supplementation may be helpful for improving sleep… but it can also
be dangerous
- Daytime drowsiness and grogginess: talking too much melatonin can lead to
drowsiness and grogginess during the daytime, which can interfere with
normal daily activities : melatonin can interact with other hormones in the
body, particularly blood thinners, anticoagulants, and medications that
suppress the immune system
Effects of Cortisol
- Increases blood sugar (energy for body)
- Suppresses immune system (anti-inflammatory/promote healing)
Enhances memory: well see next week
Increases focus: cortisol can improve focus during stress, helping a person stay alert
and attentive
→ activates the sympathetic nervous system and promotes the release of
norepinephrine and dopamine
- Melatonin rises at night, guiding us to sleep tight, and awakens with morning
light
- The sun rises and sets, guiding our sleep and wakes, hormones dance to its
beat.
- As the dawn breaks, we arise, cortisol surges, our bodies energize, a new day, a
fresh sunrise
Light Therapy
- Administered with or without melatonin supplementation
- Light therapy at dawn (sunrise) helps correct cases in which people stay up
too late
- Light therapy in the evening helps correct cases in which people fel sleepy too
early
- Following light therapy, serotonin transporter binding in patients with
seasonal depression is reduced– what does this mean?
- Variations in genes that express melanopsin, the photopigment in ipRGCs
may predispose people to seasonal depression
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
- Generally, low EEG frequencies show large synchronized
Amplitudes (dela and theta)
- High frequencies (beta and gamma) show small amplitudes due to high
degree of desynchronization
Synchronous→ neurons firing in unison; correlated with sleep
Desynchronous→ independent action of many neurons; correlated with waking
REM Networks
- REM on areas located in pons
- Lesions to neurons in the rostral pontine reticular formation abolish
REM sleep
- During NREM, locus coeruleus and raphe nuclei reduce their activity
- During REM they are essentially silent, disinhibiting the REM-on areas
- Pons, Lateral Geniculate Nucleus, Occipital Cortex waves or PGO waves are
associated with eye moments of REM sleep
- EEG waves that originate in the pons and travel to the occipital lobe (via
thalamus)
- After 30 mins, the locus coeruleus and raphe nuclei reactivate and inhibit
REM- on areas
- Reactivation of locus coeruleus and raphe nuclei leads to either
wakefulness or another segment of NREM sleep
Why do we Sleep??
Dreaming
- Dreaming occurs during both REM sleep and NREM
- REM dreams and lengthy, complicated, vivid, storylike
- NREM dreams are short episodes characterized by logical single images and a
relative lack of emotion
- Threat simulation hypothesis
- Provide practice for dealing with threats
- 70% of dreams have negative emotional content
- Activation-synthesis theory
- Dream content reflects ongoing neural activity
- PGO waves randomly bombard the cortex, activating memories
- Study: volunteers sprinkled with water dreamed about rain
WEEK 12- CHAPTER 12- LEARNING AND MEMORY
Types of Learning
- Associative learning: classical conditioning operant conditioning
- Nonassociative learning: habituation sensitization
- Social learning
Social Learning
- Learning by watching others allow an organism to benefit from the
experience of others without risk or cost
- Also involves many of the same circuits as classical and operant conditioning
- Can also occur in groups
Memory
THE IMPORTANCE OF MEMORY
- Memory is central to all cognitive functions
- Uses a combination of systems that help us access information
- Memory is pervasive, it impacts all aspects of our lives
- Sense of self
- Problem solving
- Routines and habits
- Social functions
STAGES OF MEMORY
Stage 1: encoding → learning and creating patterns of our experiences to imprint into
our memory
Stage 2: storage → maintenance and organization of the patterns we imprint. Can
impact retrieval
Stage 3: retrieval → recovery of stored information in response to a cue
SENSORY MEMORY
- Information that is attended to by any of our senses enters sensory memory
- Can hold a myriad of information at the expense of time
- From this information, we select what we want to attend to, the rest is
forgotten
EPISODIC MEMORY
- Episodic memory relates to your own personal experience
SEMANTIC MEMORY
- Semantic memory contains basic knowledge of facts and language
- Autobiographical memory
- Interconnection between semantic and episodic memory
PROCEDURAL MEMORY
- Procedural memory stores information about motor skills and procedures
PRIMING
- Exposure to one stimuli changes subsequent responding to another
HOW DO STM’S STORE AS LTM’S ?
SPATIAL MAPPING
- Rats are good at spatial learning. THey can find the hidden platform in
minutes and remember the solution for months
- NMDA receptor antagonists in the hippocampus → rats do not
Produce LTP or learn
- If NMDA receptor antagonists arre applied after learning task, no effect
on LTP or learning
- Mice who lack component of AMPA receptor (GluA 1-4) → impaired
performance on spatial tasks
- when LTP compromised, memory maps are inefficient and unstable
INHIBITORY AVOIDANCE
- Rat is placed in apparatus with light and dark side
- When they enter the dark side, they receive an electric shock
- Rapid avoidance learning as increasingly hesitant to enter dark
- Analysis of CA1 area
- Same changes in AMPA receptor observed during LTP
FEAR CONDITIONING
- Classical conditioning paradigm
- Light or sound (CS) paired with eclectic shock to feet (UCS)
- Response to CS by freezing/remain immobile
MEMORY CONSOLIDATION
- Consolidation occurs in waves over time
- Role of transcription factors
- Transcription is the copying of DNA to RNA
- Importance of CREB
- Role of translation
- Translation is production of proteins by RNA
- C/EPBβ
- IGF-2
WHAT IS NEUROPSYCHOLOGY?
- Clinical psychology is a branch of psychology that focuses on the diagnosis
and treatment of mental, emotional, and behavioural disorders
- Neuropsychology is a speciality field within clinical psychology that focuses
on the diagnosis and treatment of patients with cognitive impairements
resulting from
- Aging
- Injury
- Disease
NEUROPSYCHOLOGY VS NEUROLOGY
- Neurologists graduate from a clinical program in a psychology department
(MD)
- Neuropsychologists graduate from a clinical program in a psychology
department (PhD)
- Often work with neurosurgeons, psychiatrists, neurologists, and other
specialist ‘CNS” doctors, like: neuro oncologists, pathologists,
radiologists, and ophthalmologists
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
- Goal is to develop an infrared treatment plan
- Choice of methods depends on the issues involved
- Standardized tests
- Comparisons with population (eg. test norms)
- Comparisons with abilities unaffected by condition
- Iq tests
- Comprehensive test battery (eg. Halstead-Reitan battery)
- Conditions might affect test performance (eg. pain, fatigue, medications)
makes interpretation more difficult
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL TRAINING
Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)
- Assesses multiple domains of cognitive functioning
- Short term memory
- Visuospatial abilities (understanding and manipulate spatial
relationships)
- Executive functions (planning, problem solving, abstraction)
- Attention, concentration, working memory
- Language functions
- Orientation to time and place
NEUROCOGNITIVE DISORDERS
- A disorder characterized by a decline in cognitive function following a
challenge to the nervous system
- Blows to the head
- Interruptions in the blood supply to the brain
- Tumors
- Infections
- Described in the DSM-5
- Decline in function may occur in any of the following areas
- Attention
- Executive function
- Learning and memory
- Perception and movement
- Social cognition
CEREBRAL HEMORRHAGE
- Frequency: 20% of strokes
- Outcome: often fatal
- Causes: hypertension (high blood pressure) and aneurysms (balloon-like
bulges in arteries)
- If someone is rushed the ER and stroke is suspected, doctors are likely to order
a CT to check for hemorrhage
- How would a cerebral hemorrhage appear on CT? —-->
ISCHEMIA
- Frequency: 80% of strokes
- Outcomes: variable because infarcts (dead tissue) can vary in sze and location;
changes in consciousness, sensation, and movement
- Causes: atherosclerosis (thickening and hardening of artery walls) and blood
clots
- Thrombosis: a blockage that doesn’t move down from its point of
origin
- Embolism: a blood vessel blockage that originates elsewhere and travel into
smaller and smaller blood vessels until it forms a blockage
- Eg. atrial fibrillation → abnormal heart rhythm (jiggling heart)
ATRIAL FIBRILLATION AND EMBOLISM
ISCHEMIA CONT…
- Transient ischemic attacks (TIAs)-- mini stroke
- Brief episodes of stroke symptoms (24 hrs or less)
- Do not cause permanent damage
- Strong predictors of subsequent stroke
- Recognizing a stroke : F A S T
- Facial drooping
- Arm weakness
- Speech difficulty
- Time: hurry up
Other symptoms: sudden severe headache, numbness or weakness in arm/leg,
difficulty seeing, walking, maintaining balance
MILITARY TBIs
- can combine open and closed injuries
- Usually more severe than civilian TBI
- Severe swelling
- Disruption of blood- brain barrier
- Damage to blood supply
Alcohol
- Nutritional deficits: eg. insufficient vitamin B1, can damage hippocampus
- Korsakoff syndrome: problems learning new information and recalling both
recent and past events
BRAIN TUMORS
- Tumors: independent growths of new tissue that lack purpose
Primary brain tumors
- Originate in brain
- Rare
- Causes unknown, radiation is a risk
Secondary brain tumors
- Originate from metastasized cancer outside brain
WHO CLASSIFICATION
GRADE 1 →benign, slow-growing tumors
→ meningioma
GRADE 2 → malignant, likely to recur following treatment but are slow growing
→ some types of oligodendroglioma
GRADE 3 → malignant, likely to recur, and can mutate to grade 4 tumors
→ other types of oligodendroglioma
GRADE 4 → highly malignant, infiltrative, and incurable
→ astocytoma (glioblastoma)
NEUROCYSTICERCOSIS
Results from infection with eggs of pork tapeworm, taenia solium
- Ingesting infected fecal matter (from a symptom free-tapeworm
carrier)
- Eggs hatch in the stomach and the larvae penetrate the intestine, travel in the
bloodstream
- Lodge themselves into soft tissues, like the brian
- Fluid filled cysts develop around the larvae (1 or 2 cm in diameter)
- In most cases, the immune system destroys the cyst… but not all cases
- Once the worm dies, the immune system flares up and symptoms
begin, usually seizures
- Treatment: anti-seizure medication; if the worm is still alive,
anthelmintic medications… surgery’s also an option
PARTIAL SEIZURES
- Have a clear area of origin and spread outward
- Sometimes preceded by an aura, a subjective sensory or motor
sensation (that you shouldn’t be having
- Simple partial seizures
- Cause movements and sensations appropriate to the point of origin
- No change in consciousness
- Complex partial seizures
- Normally begin in the temporal lobes
- Changes in consciousness: patient will be very confused and have no
memory of the seizure
- The patient may sense that he or she is re-experiencing a past event or
may feel that the environment is oddly unknown or foreign
GENERALIZED SEIZURES
- Affect brain symmetrically and have no clear point of origin
- Result from activation circuits connecting thalamus and cortex
- Tonic-clonic (grand mal) seizures
- Tonic phase: lasts several seconds; loss of consciousness, cessation of
breathing, and muscle contraction
- Clonic phase: lasts about one minute, violent repetitive muscle
contractions
- Coma lasting about five minutes after a few tonic clonic cycles
- Absence (petit mal) seizures
- More mild; patient experiences a brief period of
unconsciousness (10 secs); 3/sec spike and wave on EEG
- Motor movements are limited; patient will remain
sitting or standing if they are already doing so
KENNARD PRINCIPLE
- Recovery from brain damage is related to developmental stage
- Younger brains reorganize more effectively
- Applies to language functions but not all functions
COGNITIVE RESERVE
- Some people are less impacted by brain injury or neurodegenerative
processes than others
- Brain size, number of synapses
- Coping with damage by using cognitive networks in more flexible ways
- Behavioral outcomes do not always correlate with extent of braindamage
- Variables linked to cognitive reserve
- IQ
- • Educational and occupational status
- • Engagement in enriching leisure activities