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Test your basic knowledge |
Behavioral Neuroscience
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Subject
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health-sciences
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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Match each statement with the correct term.
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This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Body plan in which organs or parts present on both sides of the body are mirror images in appearance.
Bilateral Symmetry
Gray Matter
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Sympathetic Division
2. That holds that both a nonmaterial mind and the material body contribute to behavior.
Dualism
Forebrain
Hemispherectomy
Gyrus (Gyri)
3. Newest - outer layer (new bark) of the forebrain and composed of about six layers of gray matter that creates or reality.
Neocortex (cerebral cortex)
Neuroplasticity
Law of Bell and Magendie
Common Ancestor
4. Fiber system connecting the two cerebral hemispheres to provide a route for direct communication between them.
Corpus Callosum
Cerebrum
Tract
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
5. Darwin's theory for explaining how new species evolve and how existing species change over time. Differential success in the reproduction of different characteristics (phenotypes) results from the interaction of organisms with their environment.
Nerve
Efferent
Natural Selection
Chordate
6. Idea that selection for improved brain cooling through increased blood circulation in the brains of early hominids enabled the brain to grow larger.
Persistent Vegetative State (PVS)
Common Ancestor
Cerebellum
Radiator Hypothesis
7. Roof (area above the ventricle) of the midbrain; its functions are sensory processing - particular visual and auditory - and the production of orienting movements.
Natural Selection
Hemisphere
Cerebrum
Tectum
8. Division into a number of parts that are similar; refers to the idea that many animals - including vertebrates - are composed of similarly organized body segments.
Segmentation
Hemispherectomy
Tract
Cerebral Cortex
9. Disorder of the motor system correlated with a loss of dopamine in the brain an characterized by tremors - muscular rigidity - and a reduction in voluntary movement.
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10. Animal that has both a brain and a spinal cord.
Diencephalon
Encephalization quotient
Spinal Cord
Chordate
11. Condition in which a person can display some rudimentary behaviors - such as smiling - or utter a few words but is otherwise not conscious.
Efferent
Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
Minimally Conscious State (MCS)
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
12. Midbrain area in which nuclei and fiber pathways are mixed - producing a netlike appearance; associated with sleep-wake behavior and behavioral arousal.
Reticular Formation
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Radiator Hypothesis
Hemispherectomy
13. Proposed nonmaterial entity responsible for intelligence - attention - awareness and consciousness.
Clinical Trial
Encephalization quotient
Thalamus
Mind
14. Process in which maturation is delayed - and so an adult retains infant characteristics; idea derived from the observation that newly evolved species resemble the young of their common ancestors.
Alzheimer's Disease
Bilateral Symmetry
Nerve
Neoteny
15. Quandary of explaining a nonmaterial mind in command of a material body.
Mind-Body Problem
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
Cerebrum
Neuroplasticity
16. Surgical removal of a cerebral hemisphere.
Forebrain
Gray Matter
Hemispherectomy
Somatic Nervous System (SNS)
17. Literally - half a sphere - referring to one side of the cerebral cortex or of one side of the cerebellum.
Hominid
Hemisphere
Neuron
Frontal Lobe
18. Conducting away from the central nervous system structure.
Frontal Lobe
Bilateral Symmetry
Efferent
Parasympathetic Division
19. Disorder of the basal ganglia characterized by tics; involuntary vocalizations (including curse words and animal sounds); and odd - involuntary movements of the body; especially of the face and head.
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20. Evolutionarily the oldest part of the brain; contains pons - medulla - reticular formation - and cerebellum structures that coordinate and control most voluntary and involuntary movements.
Neuron
Hindbrain
Ganglia
Corpus Callosum
21. A specialized 'nerve cell' engaged in information processing.
Tegmentum
Stroke
Sulcus (Sulci)
Neuron
22. Movement related to sensory inputs - such as turning the head to see the source of a sound.
Cerebral Cortex
Spinal Cord
Orienting movement
Materialism
23. Collection of nerve cells that function somewhat like a brain.
Tourettes's Syndrome
Neuroplasticity
Cerebrum
Ganglia
24. The brain and spinal cord that together mediate behavior.
Hemisphere
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Parietal Lobe
Neuron
25. Large collection of axons coursing together within the central nervous system.
Neocortex (cerebral cortex)
Tract
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
26. Hypothesis that the movements that we make and those that we perceive in others are essential features of our conscious behavior.
Parietal Lobe
Neocortex (cerebral cortex)
Embodied Consciousness
Species-typical behavior
27. Learned behaviors that are passed on from on generation to the next through teaching and experience.
Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
Culture
Hindbrain
Parietal Lobe
28. Behavior that is characteristic of all members of a species.
Dualism
Encephalization quotient
Alzheimer's Disease
Species-typical behavior
29. Subcortical forebrain nuclei that coordinate voluntary movements of the limbs and body; connected to the thalamus and to the midbrain.
White Matter
Basal ganglia
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
Neoteny
30. Areas of the nervous system rich in fat-sheathed neural axons that form the connections between brain cells.
Mind-Body Problem
Neocortex (cerebral cortex)
Culture
White Matter
31. Area of the skin supplied with afferent nerve fibers by a single spinal-cord dorsal root.
Encephalization quotient
Minimally Conscious State (MCS)
Dermatome
Ganglia
32. Cortex that functions in connection with hearing - language - and musical abilities and lies below the lateral fissure - beneath the temporal bone at the side of the lobe.
Occipital Lobe
Tegmentum
Mentalism
Temporal Lobe
33. Approved experiment directed toward developing a treatment.
Orienting movement
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Persistent Vegetative State (PVS)
Clinical Trial
34. Diencephalon structure through which information from all sensory systems is integrated and projected into the appropriate region of the neocortex.
Meninges
Sympathetic Division
Hypothalamus
Dualism
35. Part of the autonomic nervous system; arouses the body for action - such as mediating the involuntary fight-or-flight response to alarm by increasing hear rate and blood pressure.
Hominid
Somatic Nervous System (SNS)
Sympathetic Division
Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
36. Harry Jerison's quantitative measure of brain size obtained from the ratio of actual brain size to expected brain size - according to the principle of proper mass - for an animal of a particular body size.
Limbic system
Hypothalamus
Bilateral Symmetry
Encephalization quotient
37. Wound to the brain that results from a blow to the head..
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Cerebral Cortex
Species
Sulcus (Sulci)
38. Cerebral Cortex that functions to direct movements toward a goal or to perform a task - such as grasping an object - lying posterior to the central sulcus and beneath the parietal bone at the top of the skull.
Orienting movement
Parietal Lobe
Hemispherectomy
Nerve Set
39. Large collection of axons coursing together outside of the central nervous system.
Hindbrain
Nerve
Species
Species-typical behavior
40. Clear solution of sodium chloride and other salts that fills the ventricles inside the brain and circulates around the brain and spinal cord beneath the arachnoid layer in the subarachnoid space.
Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
Neocortex (cerebral cortex)
Segmentation
41. Major structure of the forebrain - consisting of two virtually identical hemispheres (left and right) and responsible for most conscious behavior.
Psyche
Cerebrum
Inhibition
Somatic Nervous System (SNS)
42. One of four cavities in the brain that contain cerebrospinal fluid that cushions the brain and may play a role in maintaining brain metabolism.
Ventricle
Common Ancestor
Dermatome
Embodied Consciousness
43. The bones - or segments - that form the spinal column.
Vertebrae
Species-typical behavior
Hypothalamus
Orienting movement
44. Part of the autonomic nervous system; acts in opposition to the sympathetic division- for example - preparing the body to rest and digest by reversing the alarm response or stimulating digestion.
Reticular Formation
Afferent
Nerve
Parasympathetic Division
45. Areas of the nervous system composed predominantly of cell bodies and blood vessels that function either to collect and modify information or to support this activity.
Alzheimer's Disease
Cerebellum
Brainstem
Gray Matter
46. Decrease in the activity of a neuron or brain area.
Species-typical behavior
Cerebral Cortex
Inhibition
Orienting movement
47. Philosophical position that holds that behavior can be explained as a function of the nervous system without explanatory recourse to the mind.
Materialism
Culture
Nerve Set
Cerebellum
48. Cerebral cortex where visual processing begins - lying at the back of the brain ad beneath the occipital bone.
Midbrain
Occipital Lobe
Minimally Conscious State (MCS)
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
49. Part of the PNS that regulates the functioning of internal organs and glands.
Neuroplasticity
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
Somatic Nervous System (SNS)
Stroke
50. Map of the neocortex based on the organization - structure - and distribution of the cells.
Tegmentum
Neocortex (cerebral cortex)
Hominid
Cytoarchitectonic map
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