Friday, January 31, 2014

Brain Damage


So here we are, our first real post. Are you excited, because I am. So today we’re going to talk about brain damage. “What the heck?” You ask incredulously, why would anyone interested in psychology care about brain damage. (Hopefully you’re interested in psychology and not stalking random blogs). Brain damage is very important to the field of psychology because it helped us realize that different areas of the brain had different functions. So what is brain damage, what does it mean when someone has brain damage? Most people can’t correctly describe what having brain damage does to a person, but they’ll use it to describe all kinds of people, like this Bill Cosby video.

 

 Brain damage produces an inability to recognize faces, to perceive motion, a shift of attention to the right side of the body and world, increase or decrease hunger, memory impairment, changes in emotional responses and other effects. Although we can study the effects in humans, and get great results, those studies are limited. One limit is that few people have damage that is confined to just one area of the brain. Another is that no one has the exact same kind of damage. So to better understand brain damage, scientists have turned to producing damage to the brains of lab animals. To do this, scientists employ several research techniques to study the effects that they cause to the brain. One us an ablation, which is a removal of an area of the brain with a surgical knife. However there are problems involving the tiny structures below the surface of the brain. So scientists employ another technique called a lesion, where they create the damage. To create that damage, they use a stereotaxic instrument. To create the lesion, the scientists anesthetize the animal, drill a hole in their skull, insert and electrode and pass an electric current that is sufficient enough to cause damage to the area. A couple more techniques that are used are the gene-knockout approach and transcranial magnetic stimulation. Although studying brain damage yields interesting results, scientists encounter a problem, and that is that they must specify the exact behavioral deficit. For them to even try to narrow down the possibilities, they would need to perform several other behavioral tests. But that’s a topic for another day. So that’s all the time we have today, I hope this was in some way interesting to you and you learned something new. Hopefully you weren’t bored halfway through this post and left, but if you did read through the whole post, thank you for taking the time to do so.

2 comments:

  1. Like you mentioned I also agree that no brain damage is alike which does make it difficult to provide the right medical services that they might need. Especially when it is something new to doctors and do not know how to repair it. I liked how you provided information about the different techniques that they have to do in order to study and know how our brain works. I have been so interested in this topic ever since I took a neurology course for my major and was assigned to read the book Where is the Mango Princess?

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  2. This is very informative, even though we don’t know much about the human brain. If we can fix some people who are brain dead or have brain damage we can give that person who may not be able to do certain bodily function things such as the chance to walk, talk etc. and get back to every day functions. Also giving the family of that person with brain damage the chance to have their loved ones back.

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