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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Physiological/behavioral Neuroscience 1
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gre
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psychology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
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. Process in which neural pathways are connected and then some die out (children go through these process)
Hyperphagia
Blooming and pruning
Cell membrane
Antagonists
2. Jumping from one node of Ranvier to the next due to insulation by myelin sheath
Neuromodulators
Thalamus
Soma
Saltatory conduction
3. Measures oxygen flow in different brain areas - used most in cognitive psych to measure activity in different brain regions during certain tasks
Saltatory conduction
Rapid Eye Movement sleep
Hypothalamus
fMRI
4. comprises 50% of total sleep at birth - decreases to 25% - 20% sleep time spent in this type of sleep - Interspersed with non-REM every 30-40min - where dreams are experience - characterized by neural desynchrony - also known as paradoxical sleep -->
Neural synchrony
PET
Meninges
Rapid Eye Movement sleep
5. 4-6 complete ones - each about 90 minutes - early in the night most time in stage 3 and 4 - 2 and REM sleep predominate later
Non-REM sleep (4 stages of sleep)
Excitatory postsynaptic potential
Sleep cycles
Apraxia
6. 16 hours of sleep a day - 6 hours
Luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH)
Sleep hours for infants and elderly respectively
Amygdala
Glutamate
7. Measures brain wave patterns and have made it possible to study waking and sleeping states
fMRI
Delta waves
Electroencephalogram
Inhibitory postsynaptic potential
8. Consists of myelencephalon - metencephalon - and reticular formation
White Matter
Mesencephalon
Sympathetic nervous system
Hindbrain
9. Dysfunction in certain cortical association area - language disorder from damage to Broca'S area - in left frontal lobe; can understand speech but has difficulty speaking (slow - laborious - omits words)
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10. Occurs when people deprived of REM sleep - compensate by spending more time in REM sleep later in the night
Oligodendrocytes
Rebound effect
Alpha waves
estrogen
11. Overeating with no satiation of hunger; leads to obesity; damage to ventromedial region of hypothalamus
Hindbrain
Nodes of Ranvier
Hyperphagia
Indolamines
12. Beginning of neuron (dendrites)
Peripheral nervous system (subsystems)
Synapse gap
Postsynaptic cell
Saltatory conduction
13. Once minimum threshold is met - intensity always the same regardless of amount of stimulation
Neural synchrony
All-or-none law
resting potential
Agnosia
14. Low-amplitude and fast -frequency alpha waves
Neural synchrony
Synapse gap
Telencephalon
Mesencephalon
15. An amino acid - most abundant excitatory neurotransmitter.
Glutamate
Sleep hours for infants and elderly respectively
Vasopressin
fMRI
16. Increase effects of a neurotransmitter (e.g. selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors [for depression] increase serotonin activity)
PET
Hyperphagia
Agonists
Brain evolution
17. Control large voluntary muscle movements - Their degeneration is related to motor dysfunction in Parkinson'S and Huntington'S
Basal ganglia
Beta waves
Organizational hormones
Agraphia
18. Divided into diencephalon and telencephalon
Forebrain (division)
Efferent fibers
Hindbrain
Blooming and pruning
19. Dysfunction in certain cortical association area - inability to organize movement
Neural synchrony
Apraxia
Hyperphagia
Pituitary gland
20. Or just synapse - the space between 2 neurons where they communication
Parietal lobe
Thyroid stimulating hormone
Limbic system
Synapse gap
21. Gray matter - white matter
Catecholamines
Cell membrane
Sleep cycles
Spine (subsystem)
22. Stage 0 & 1 non-REM sleep - low-amplitude and fast-frequency waves
resting potential
Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
Organizational hormones
Alpha waves
23. PNS fibers that run away from CNS (to cause effect the brain wants)
Efferent fibers
Neuromodulators
Occipital lobe
Alexia
24. Of telencephalon - structures around the brainstem involved in 4Fs (fleeing - feeding - fighting - and fornicating)
Limbic system
Agnosia
Delta waves
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
25. ANS - controls arousal mechanisms (blood circulation - pupil dilation - threat and fear response) - Lie detector test relies on the premise -->lying activates the sympathetic nervous system and cause things like (increase heart rate - blood pressure
Peripheral nervous system (subsystems)
Sympathetic nervous system
Cortical association areas
Sleep hours for infants and elderly respectively
26. Positron emission tomography - scans glucose metabolism to measure activity in various brain regions
Female menstrual cycle (hormones)
Nodes of Ranvier
PET
Axon
27. Of cerebral cortex - responsible for vision
Stereotaxic instruments
Blooming and pruning
Female menstrual cycle (hormones)
Occipital lobe
28. Like neurotransmitters but cause long-term changes in postsynaptic cell
Amygdala
Telencephalon
Broca'S aphasia
Neuromodulators
29. Consists of limbic system - hippocampus - amygdala - cingulate gyrus
Telencephalon
Neural synchrony
Rapid Eye Movement sleep
All-or-none law
30. Provide myelin in peripheral nervous system
Theta waves
Hippocampus
Synaptic vessels
Schwann cells
31. Include dopamine - lack of dopamine linked with Parkinson'S - excess dopamine is linked with schizophrenia - dopamine is also involved in feelings of reward and therefore addiction
Agonists
Amino acids
Somatic nervous system
Catecholamines
32. Bumps seen on cortex surface
Hyperphagia
Sleep hours for infants and elderly respectively
Gyri
Neuron
33. Inner core of spine - cell bodies and dendrites
Gray matter
Neuromodulators
Excitatory postsynaptic potential
Hippocampus
34. (1) resting potential - neuron negatively charged - cell membrane does not let ions in; (2) presynaptic cell releases neurotransmitters from terminal buttons; (3) postsynaptic receptors in postsynaptic cells detects neurotransmitter and open ion chan
Steps in neural transmission
Superior colliculus
Neuron
Axon
35. Of mesencephalon - vision and hearing
Relative refractory period
Forebrain (division)
Tectum
Reticular formation
36. Of cerebral cortex - responsible for hearing - also Wernicke'S area (related to speech)
Neurotransmitters
Temporal lobe
Oligodendrocytes
H-Y antigen
37. Of telencephalon - involves in memory- transfer STM into LTM - - new neurons can form in adult mammalian brain
Hippocampus
Nodes of Ranvier
Sleep hours for infants and elderly respectively
Efferent fibers
38. Of pituitary - regulate water levels in body and therefore BP
Vasopressin
Postsynaptic cell
Endorphins
Parietal lobe
39. Made up of somatic nervous system and autonomic nervous system
Alpha waves
Peripheral nervous system (subsystems)
H-Y antigen
Thyroid stimulating hormone
40. An amino acid - most abundant inhibitory neurotransmitter
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
Reticular formation
Limbic system
All-or-none law
41. Of diencephalon - channels sensory information to cerebral cortex
Catecholamines
Schwann cells
Parietal lobe
Thalamus
42. Fissures seen on cortex surface
Luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH)
Frontal lobe
Sulci
Autonomic nervous system
43. Linked to pleasure and analgesia; can be endogenous (opioid peptides) or exogenous (morphine or heroin) - Exogenous endorphine are highly addictive
Stereotaxic instruments
Endorphins
Gray matter
Pituitary gland
44. Incredible rage easily provoked when cerebral cortex is removed
Sham rage
Presynaptic cell
Cortical association areas
Schwann cells
45. Bumps on the brainstem - controls visual reflexes
Soma
Cerebral cortex (subsystem)
Monoamines
Superior colliculus
46. Chemicals that stimulate nearby cells
Hypothalamus
Delta waves
Neurotransmitters
postsynaptic potentials
47. Of Hindbrain - aka medulla; Mainly controls for reflexes - but also controls sleep - attention - movement
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
Synapse gap
Myelencephalon
Inferior colliculus
48. Changes in a nerve cell'S charge as the result of stimulation - 2 forms: excitatory postsynaptic potential and inhibitory postsynaptic potential
Dendrites
Rebound effect
postsynaptic potentials
Activational hormones
49. Of cerebral cortex - responsible for somatosensory system
Agonists
Parietal lobe
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
Neuron
50. Released at neuromuscular junction to cause contraction of skeletal muscles - also involved in parasympathetic nervous system
Acetylcholine
Hyperphagia
Afferent fibers
Neurotransmitters