Studying the Brain
To examine the brain’s functions, researchers
have to study a working brain, which means they can’t use cadavers. Invasive
studies, in which researchers actually put instruments into the brain, can’t be
done in humans, though they can be done occasionally during medically necessary
brain surgery. Researchers usually use invasive techniques in animal studies.
There are two main types of invasive animal studies:
·
Lesioning studies: Researchers use an electrode and an
electric current to burn a specific, small area of the brain.
·
Electric stimulation of the brain: Researchers
activate a particular brain structure by using a weak electric current sent
along an implanted electrode.
Because they cannot use such invasive
techniques on humans, researchers study human brains in two ways:
·
They examine people with brain injuries or diseases and see what
they can and can’t do.
·
They use electroencephalographs (EEGs), which can
record the overall electrical activity in the brain via electrodes placed on the
scalp.
Recently, high-tech innovations have made
studying human brains easier. Researchers use three types of imaging equipment
to study the brain:
·
Computerized tomography (CT): In CT, a number of x-rays are taken of
the brain from different angles. A computer then combines the x-rays to produce
a picture of a horizontal slice through the brain.
·
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): Both brain
structure and function can be visualized through MRI scans, which are
computer-enhanced pictures produced by magnetic fields and radio waves.
·
Positron emission tomography (PET): For PET scans,
researchers inject people with a harmless radioactive chemical, which collects
in active brain areas. The researchers then look at the pattern of
radioactivity in the brain, using a scanner and a computer, and figure out
which parts of the brain activate during specific tasks, such as lifting an arm
or feeling a particular emotion.
REFERENCE
SparkNotes
Editors. “SparkNote on Neurons, Hormones, and the Brain.” SparkNotes LLC. 2005.
http://www.sparknotes.com/psychology/psych101/thebrain/ (accessed November 5,
2016).
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