1. The oldest and most primitive part
of the brain is the:
-
brain stem
-
visual cortex
-
sensory cortex
-
thalamus
-
pituitary gland
2. Paralysis of the left arm might be explained
by a problem in the
-
motor cortex in the frontal lobe in the left
hemisphere.
-
Motor cortex in the frontal lobe in the right
hemisphere.
-
Sensorimotor cortex in the temporal lobe in
the left hemisphere.
-
Motor cortex in the parietal lobe in the left
hemisphere.
-
Motor cortex in the occipital lobe in the
right hemisphere.
3. Deafness can result from damage to the
inner ear or damage to what area of the brain?
-
Connections between the auditory nerve and
the auditory cortex in the frontal lobe.
-
Connections between the auditory nerve and
the auditory cortex in the temporal lobe.
-
Connections between the areas of the sensory
cortex that receive messages from the ears and the auditory cortex.
-
Connections between the hypothalamus and the
auditory cortex in the temporal lobe.
-
Connections between the left and right sensory
areas of the cerebellum.
4. According to the theory of evolution, why
might we call some parts of the brain the old brain and some parts the
new brain?
-
Old brain parts are what exist in very young
children, and the new brain develops later
-
The old brain developed first according to
evolution..
-
The old brain becomes more active as we grow
older.
-
The new brain deals with new information,
while the old brain deals with information gathered when we were children.
-
The old brain is most affected by age deterioration
(dementias) while the new brain remains unaffected.
5. The "mini brain" or __________ coordinates
posture, movement,and the sense of balance.
-
RAS
-
Cerebrum
-
Ganglia
-
Hippocampus
-
Cerebellum
6. Which chemicals pass across the synaptic
gap and increase the possibility the next neuron in the chain will fire?
-
synaptic peptides
-
inhibitory neurotransmitters
-
adrenaline-type exciters
-
excitatory neurotransmitters
-
potassium and sodium
7. You eat some bad sushi and feel that you
are slowly losing control over your muscles. The bacteria you ingested
from the bad sushi most likely interferes with the use of
-
Serotonin
-
Dopamine
-
Acetylcholine
-
Thorazine
-
Adrenaline
8. The three major categories researchers
use to organize the entire brain are the
-
old brain, new brain, and cerebral cortex
-
lower, middle, and upper brain.
-
Hindbrain, midbrain, and forebrain.
-
Brain stem, limbic system, and cerebral cortex
-
Neurons, synapses, and cerebral cortex.
9. The ________ monitors and sorts out messages
from your senses
-
Pineal gland
-
Amygdala
-
Neocortex
-
Hippocampus
-
Thalamus
10. A spinal reflex differs from a normal
sensory and motor reaction in that
-
a spinal reflex occurs only in response to
extremely stressful stimuli.
-
In a spinal reflex, the spine moves the muscles
in response as soon as the sensory information reaches the spine while
usually the impulse must reach the brain before a response.
-
In a normal sensory/motor reaction, the spine
transmits the information through afferent nerve fibers, while reflex reactions
are transmitted along special efferent nerves.
-
Spinal reflexes are part of the central nervous
system response, while normal sensory/motor reactions are part of the peripheral
nervous system.
-
Spinal reflexes occur only in animals because
humans are born without instinctual responses.
11. Antidepressant drugs like Prozac are often
used to treat mood disorders. According to what you know about
their function, which neurotransmitter system do these types of drugs try
to affect?
-
serotonin
-
adrenaline
-
acetylcholine
-
endorphins
-
morphine
12. Which sentence most closely describes
neural transmission?
-
An electric charge is created in the neuron,
the charge travels down the cell, and chemicals are released that cross
the synapse to the next cell.
-
A chemical change occurs within the cell,
the change causes an electric charge to be produced, and the charge jumps
the gap between the nerve cells.
-
The electric charge produced chemically inside
a group of neurons causes chemical changes in surrounding cells.
-
Neurotransmitters produced in the hindbrain
are transmitted to the forebrain, causing electric changes in the cerebral
cortex.
-
Neural transmission is an electrochemical
process both inside and outside the cell.
13. The cerebellum is also known as the
-
Reptilian brain
-
Mid brain
-
Upper Brain
-
Ganglia
-
"Smell brain"
14. Dr. Dahab, a brain researcher, is
investigating the connection between certain environmental stimuli and
brain processes. Which types of brain scans is he most likely to use?
-
MRI and CAT
-
CAT and EKG
-
PET and EEG
-
EKG and CAT
-
Lesioning and MRI
15. Split-brain patients are unable to
-
Coordinate movements between their major and
minor muscle groups.
-
Speak about information received exclusively
in their right hemisphere.
-
Speak about information received exclusively
in their left hemisphere.
-
Solve abstract problems involving integrating
logical (left-hemisphere) and spatial (right hemisphere) information.
-
Speak about information received exclusively
through their left ear, left eye, or left side of their bodies.
16. When brain researchers refer to brain
plasticity , they are talking about
-
The brain’s ability to regrow damaged neurons.
-
The surface texture and appearance caused
by the layer known as the cerebral cortex.
-
The brain’s versatility caused by the millions
of different neural connections.
-
Our adaptability to different problems ranging
from survival needs to abstract reasoning.
-
New connections forming in the brain to take
over for damaged sections.
17. Mr. Spam is a 39-year-old male who
has been brought into your neurology clinic by his wife. She has
become increasingly alarmed by her husband’s behavior over the last four
months. You recommend a CAT scan to look for tumors in the brain.
Which two parts of the brain would you predict are being affected by the
tumors? List of symptoms: vastly increased appetite, body temperature
fluctuations, decreased sexual desire, jerky movements, poor balance when
walking and standing, inability to throw objects, and exaggerated efforts
to coordinate movements in a task
-
motor cortex and emotion cortex
-
motor cortex and hypothalamus
-
hypothalamus and cerebellum
-
cerebellum and medulla
-
thalamus and motor cortex
18. In most people, which one of the
following is a specific function of the left hemisphere that is typically
not controlled by the right hemisphere?
-
producing speech
-
control of the left hand
-
spatial reasoning
-
hypothesis testing
-
abstract reasoning
19. Which of the following is NOT part of
the limbic system?
-
Pineal gland
-
Amygdala
-
Neocortex
-
Hippocampus
-
Thalamus
20. Blindness could result from damage to
which cortex and lobe of the brain?
-
visual cortex in the frontal lobe
-
visual cortex in the temporal lobe
-
sensory cortex in the parietal lobe
-
visual cortex in the occipital lobe
-
cerebral cortex in the occipital lobe
21. The pineal gland
-
controls the release of hormones which enable
your body to produce energy out of te food you eat
-
is responsible for the rate at which your
body grows and matures
-
triggers either angry aggression or docility
-
forms and stores new memories
-
houses your emotions and regulates your body
temperature
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