also involves the
AXON The fiber-like extension of a neuron by which the cell sends information to target cells.
BASAL GANGLIA Clusters of neurons that include the caudate nucleus, the putamen, the globus pallidus, and the substantia nigra. Located deep in the brain, the basal ganglia play an important role in movement, especially control of posture and equilibrium and unconscious adjustments of certain muscles for execution of more voluntary movements regulated by the motor cortex (see
BIPOLAR DISORDER A psychiatric disorder characterized by wild mood swings. Individuals experience manic periods of high energy and creativity and depressed periods of low energy and sadness. Also called manic depressive disorder.
BLACK BOX Before the advent of modern imaging technologies in the 1980s and 1990s, there was no way to peer inside the brain, hence it was likened to a black box. (The phrase is borrowed from electrical engineering.) The black-box approach is also one favored by cognitive psychologists and perceptual psychologists, who draw flow diagrams, or charts that indicate purported stages of information processing in the brain without being burdened by knowledge of brain anatomy.
BLINDSIGHT A condition in some patients who are effectively blind because of damage to the visual cortex but can carry out tasks which would ordinarily appear to be impossible unless they can see the objects. For instance they can point out an object and accurately describe whether a stick is vertical or horizontal, even though they can’t consciously perceive the object. The explanation appears to be that visual information travels along two pathways in the brain: the
BRAINSTEM The major route by which the
BROCA’S AREA The region that is located in the left
CAPGRAS SYNDROME A rare syndrome in which the person is convinced that close relatives—usually parents, spouse, children or siblings—are imposters. It may be caused by damage to connections between areas of the brain dealing with face recognition and those handling emotional responses. Someone with Capgras syndrome might recognize the faces of loved ones but not feel the emotional reaction normally associated with that person. Also called Capgras delusion.
CEREBELLUM An ancient region of the brain that plays an important role in motor control and in some aspects of cognitive functioning. The cerebellum (Latin for “little brain”) contributes to the coordination, precision, and accurate timing of movements.
CEREBRAL CORTEX The outermost layer of the
CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES The two halves of the brain partially specialized for different things—the left hemisphere for speech, writing, language, and calculation; the right hemisphere for spatial abilities, face recognition in vision, and some aspects of music perception (scales rather than rhythm or beat). A speculative conjecture holds that the left hemisphere is the “conformist,” trying to make everything fit in order to forge ahead, whereas the right hemisphere is your devil’s advocate, or reality check. Freudian
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING Learning in which a stimulus that naturally produces a specific response (an unconditioned stimulus) is repeatedly paired with a neutral stimulus (a conditioned stimulus). As a result, the conditioned stimulus starts evoking a response similar to that of the unconditioned stimulus. Related to
COGNITION The process or processes by which an organism gains knowledge of, or becomes aware of, events or objects in its environment and uses that knowledge for comprehension and problem solving.
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY The scientific study of information processing in the brain. Cognitive psychologists often do experiments to isolate the stages of information processing. Each stage can be described as a
COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE The discipline that attempts to provide neurological explanations of cognition and perception. The emphasis is on basic science, although there may be clinical spin-offs.
CONE A primary receptor cell for vision located in the retina. Cones are sensitive to color and used primarily for daytime vision.
COTARD SYNDROME A disorder in which a patient asserts that he or she is dead, even claiming to smell rotting flesh or worms crawling over the skin (or some other equally absurd delusion). It may be an exaggerated form of the
CROSS-MODAL Describes interactions across different sensory systems, such as touch, hearing, and vision. If I showed you an unnameable, irregularly shaped object, then blindfolded you and asked you to pick out the object with your hands from a collection of similar objects, you would use cross-modal interactions to do so. These interactions occur especially in the
DEFENSE MECHANISMS Term coined by Sigmund and Anna Freud. Information that is potentially threatening to the integrity of one’s “ego” is deflected unconsciously by various psychological mechanisms. Examples include repression of unpleasant memories, denial, rationalization, projection, and reaction formation.
DENDRITE A treelike extension of the neuron cell body. Along with the cell body, it receives information from