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Biological Psychology: Biopsychology as a Neuroscience

Biopsychology

  • focuses on brain/behavior relationships

  • denotes a biological approach to the study of psychology rather than a psychological approach to the study of biology

  • scientific study of the biology of behavior

Origins of Biopsychology

  • emerged end of 19th century

  • Hebb’s The Organization of Behavior (1949) was a key factor in the development into a major neuroscientific discipline

    • Hebb developed the first comprehensive theory of how complex psychological phenomena (e.g., perceptions, emotions, thoughts, and memories) might be produced by brain activity

  • Biopsychologists study how the brain and the rest of the nervous system determine what we perceive, feel, think, say, and do

  • Ultimate challenge for the human brain: Does our brain have the capacity to understand something as complex as itself?

Relation to Other Disciplines of Neuroscience

  • Neuroscience: scientific study of the nervous system

  • Biopsychology: discipline/subfield of neuroscience

    • bridge between psychology and neuroscience

  • Different Approaches in Neuroscience

    • Neuroanatomy: study of the structure of the nervous system

    • Neurophysiology: study of the functions and activities of the nervous system

    • Neurochemistry: study of the chemical bases of neural activity

    • Neuroendocrinology: study of interactions between the nervous system and the endocrine system

      • trends; transmitters (e.g., adrenaline, dopamine, serotonin); identities, structures, and functions of compounds (neurochemicals) that are generated and that modulate the nervous system [NEUROCHEMISTRY]

    • Neuropharmacology: study of the effects of drugs on neural activity

      • exogenous chemicals; prescription drugs

    • Neuropathology: study of nervous system disorders

      • neurological illnesses (e.g., infection, trauma, cancers)

  • These 6 fields of neuroscience are particularly relevant to biopsychological inquiry

Human and Nonhuman Objects

  • Advantages of Human Objects

    • can follow directions

    • can report subjective experiences

    • often less expensive

    • have a human brain

  • Advantages of Nonhuman Subjects

    • simpler nervous systems

    • studying various species makes it possible to use comparative approach

    • fewer ethical constraints

Experiments and Non-Experiments

  • Experiments

    • used to determine cause-and-effect relationships

    • Between-Subjects Design: different subjects under each condition

    • Within-Subjects Design: same group of subjects under each condition

    • Independent Variable: difference between conditions

    • Dependent Variable: variable measured by the experimenter to assess the effect of the IV

    • Confounding Variable: unintended difference

  • Quasi-Experiments

    • used when controlled experiments are impossible

    • examine subjects in real-world situations who have self-selected into specific conditions (e.g., excessive alcohol intake), subjects assigned themselves to treatment conditions

    • Key Problem: cannot control confounds therefore, cannot establish direct cause-and-effect relationships

  • Case Studies

    • focused on single subject

    • used when conditions are rare

    • questionable generalizability

      • cannot generalize based on a single person

Pure and Applied Research

  • Pure Research

    • primarily motivated by the curiosity of the researcher to find out how things work

    • focuses on establishing building blocks/basic concepts that may provide information salient to many problems

  • Applied Research

    • use basic research to answer specific problems

    • human and animal problems are directly addressed

    • more common in medical field, applications in psychology

6 Divisions of Biopsychology

  • Physiological Psychology

    • direct manipulation of nervous system in controlled laboratory settings (e.g., lesions, invasive recording)

    • subjects are usually lab animals

    • strong focus on pure research

    • emphasis is usually on research that contributes to the development of theories of the neural control of behavior

  • Psychopharmacology

    • focuses on the manipulation of neural activity and behavior with drugs

    • manipulation of nervous system pharmacologically

    • focuses on drug effects on behavior

    • drug effects change neural activity

    • pure research → use drugs to reveal the nature of brain-behavior interactions

    • applied questions → e.g., drug abuse, therapeutic drugs

  • Neuropsychology

    • focuses on behavioral effects of brain damage in humans, typically cortical damage

    • uses case studies and quasi-experimental designs

    • most applied of the 6 divisions of biopsychology

    • applied research

    • abnormal and illnesses

  • Psychophysiology

    • focuses on physiological and psychological processes

    • uses noninvasive recordings from humans

      • muscle tension

      • eye movement

      • pupil dilation

      • electrical conductance of the skin

    • Scalp Electroencephalogram (EEG): usual measure of brain activity

    • noninvasive → no operation done; external sensors used; no pain involved

  • Cognitive Neuroscience

    • newest divisions

    • Focus: Neural basis of cognitive processes

      • learning or memory

      • attention

      • perceptual processes

    • often employs human subjects

      • Key Methods: noninvasive, functional brain imaging techniques

    • often collaborative between varied scientists

  • Comparative Psychology

    • focuses on the biology of behavior

    • features comparative and functional approaches

    • features lab research, as well as studies of animals in their natural environments (ethology)

    • includes disciplines of evolutionary psychology (understanding behavior through its evolutionary origins) and behavioral genetics (understanding the genetic influences on behavior)

    • compare the behavior of different species in order to understand the evolution, genetics, and adaptiveness of behavior

Converging Operations: How do biopsychologists work together?

  • each area has a weakness

  • must collaborate to ask good questions

  • converging operations

    • progress made using different approaches

    • each compensate for the shortcomings of others

Scientific Interference: How do biopsychologists study the unobservable workings of the brain?

  • science is empirical

    • method of answering questions by direct observation

  • brain activity is not directly observable (e.g., one cannot see a neuron firing/neurochemicals being released from neurons)

  • scientists look at the effects of processes

    • the effects of the processes are observable, but not the processes themselves

    • Scientific Inference: scientists observe the consequences of unobservable processes and from these they infer the nature of unobservable processes

Taming a Charging Bull with Caudate Stimulation

  • implanted electrode into caudate nucleus

  • delivered an electrical stimulation when bull charged

    • this stopped the charge

  • Delgado claimed he found caudate taming center

    • suggested it might cure psychopaths

    • bulls and humans have inherently different neurosystems

    • the bull could have stopped because of the pain

Prefrontal Lobotomy

  • Prefrontal Lobotomy

    • a procedure that separates the prefrontal lobes from the rest of the brain

  • Moniz wins Nobel Prize based on research with chimpanzees (Becky)

  • following reports of success, lobotomy freely used

  • the case of Howard Dully

    • lobotomized at 12 years old at the insistence of stepmother

    • procedure done in 10 minutes

S

Biological Psychology: Biopsychology as a Neuroscience

Biopsychology

  • focuses on brain/behavior relationships

  • denotes a biological approach to the study of psychology rather than a psychological approach to the study of biology

  • scientific study of the biology of behavior

Origins of Biopsychology

  • emerged end of 19th century

  • Hebb’s The Organization of Behavior (1949) was a key factor in the development into a major neuroscientific discipline

    • Hebb developed the first comprehensive theory of how complex psychological phenomena (e.g., perceptions, emotions, thoughts, and memories) might be produced by brain activity

  • Biopsychologists study how the brain and the rest of the nervous system determine what we perceive, feel, think, say, and do

  • Ultimate challenge for the human brain: Does our brain have the capacity to understand something as complex as itself?

Relation to Other Disciplines of Neuroscience

  • Neuroscience: scientific study of the nervous system

  • Biopsychology: discipline/subfield of neuroscience

    • bridge between psychology and neuroscience

  • Different Approaches in Neuroscience

    • Neuroanatomy: study of the structure of the nervous system

    • Neurophysiology: study of the functions and activities of the nervous system

    • Neurochemistry: study of the chemical bases of neural activity

    • Neuroendocrinology: study of interactions between the nervous system and the endocrine system

      • trends; transmitters (e.g., adrenaline, dopamine, serotonin); identities, structures, and functions of compounds (neurochemicals) that are generated and that modulate the nervous system [NEUROCHEMISTRY]

    • Neuropharmacology: study of the effects of drugs on neural activity

      • exogenous chemicals; prescription drugs

    • Neuropathology: study of nervous system disorders

      • neurological illnesses (e.g., infection, trauma, cancers)

  • These 6 fields of neuroscience are particularly relevant to biopsychological inquiry

Human and Nonhuman Objects

  • Advantages of Human Objects

    • can follow directions

    • can report subjective experiences

    • often less expensive

    • have a human brain

  • Advantages of Nonhuman Subjects

    • simpler nervous systems

    • studying various species makes it possible to use comparative approach

    • fewer ethical constraints

Experiments and Non-Experiments

  • Experiments

    • used to determine cause-and-effect relationships

    • Between-Subjects Design: different subjects under each condition

    • Within-Subjects Design: same group of subjects under each condition

    • Independent Variable: difference between conditions

    • Dependent Variable: variable measured by the experimenter to assess the effect of the IV

    • Confounding Variable: unintended difference

  • Quasi-Experiments

    • used when controlled experiments are impossible

    • examine subjects in real-world situations who have self-selected into specific conditions (e.g., excessive alcohol intake), subjects assigned themselves to treatment conditions

    • Key Problem: cannot control confounds therefore, cannot establish direct cause-and-effect relationships

  • Case Studies

    • focused on single subject

    • used when conditions are rare

    • questionable generalizability

      • cannot generalize based on a single person

Pure and Applied Research

  • Pure Research

    • primarily motivated by the curiosity of the researcher to find out how things work

    • focuses on establishing building blocks/basic concepts that may provide information salient to many problems

  • Applied Research

    • use basic research to answer specific problems

    • human and animal problems are directly addressed

    • more common in medical field, applications in psychology

6 Divisions of Biopsychology

  • Physiological Psychology

    • direct manipulation of nervous system in controlled laboratory settings (e.g., lesions, invasive recording)

    • subjects are usually lab animals

    • strong focus on pure research

    • emphasis is usually on research that contributes to the development of theories of the neural control of behavior

  • Psychopharmacology

    • focuses on the manipulation of neural activity and behavior with drugs

    • manipulation of nervous system pharmacologically

    • focuses on drug effects on behavior

    • drug effects change neural activity

    • pure research → use drugs to reveal the nature of brain-behavior interactions

    • applied questions → e.g., drug abuse, therapeutic drugs

  • Neuropsychology

    • focuses on behavioral effects of brain damage in humans, typically cortical damage

    • uses case studies and quasi-experimental designs

    • most applied of the 6 divisions of biopsychology

    • applied research

    • abnormal and illnesses

  • Psychophysiology

    • focuses on physiological and psychological processes

    • uses noninvasive recordings from humans

      • muscle tension

      • eye movement

      • pupil dilation

      • electrical conductance of the skin

    • Scalp Electroencephalogram (EEG): usual measure of brain activity

    • noninvasive → no operation done; external sensors used; no pain involved

  • Cognitive Neuroscience

    • newest divisions

    • Focus: Neural basis of cognitive processes

      • learning or memory

      • attention

      • perceptual processes

    • often employs human subjects

      • Key Methods: noninvasive, functional brain imaging techniques

    • often collaborative between varied scientists

  • Comparative Psychology

    • focuses on the biology of behavior

    • features comparative and functional approaches

    • features lab research, as well as studies of animals in their natural environments (ethology)

    • includes disciplines of evolutionary psychology (understanding behavior through its evolutionary origins) and behavioral genetics (understanding the genetic influences on behavior)

    • compare the behavior of different species in order to understand the evolution, genetics, and adaptiveness of behavior

Converging Operations: How do biopsychologists work together?

  • each area has a weakness

  • must collaborate to ask good questions

  • converging operations

    • progress made using different approaches

    • each compensate for the shortcomings of others

Scientific Interference: How do biopsychologists study the unobservable workings of the brain?

  • science is empirical

    • method of answering questions by direct observation

  • brain activity is not directly observable (e.g., one cannot see a neuron firing/neurochemicals being released from neurons)

  • scientists look at the effects of processes

    • the effects of the processes are observable, but not the processes themselves

    • Scientific Inference: scientists observe the consequences of unobservable processes and from these they infer the nature of unobservable processes

Taming a Charging Bull with Caudate Stimulation

  • implanted electrode into caudate nucleus

  • delivered an electrical stimulation when bull charged

    • this stopped the charge

  • Delgado claimed he found caudate taming center

    • suggested it might cure psychopaths

    • bulls and humans have inherently different neurosystems

    • the bull could have stopped because of the pain

Prefrontal Lobotomy

  • Prefrontal Lobotomy

    • a procedure that separates the prefrontal lobes from the rest of the brain

  • Moniz wins Nobel Prize based on research with chimpanzees (Becky)

  • following reports of success, lobotomy freely used

  • the case of Howard Dully

    • lobotomized at 12 years old at the insistence of stepmother

    • procedure done in 10 minutes