Cingulate cortex Essays

  • Multitasking In College Essay

    1063 Words  | 3 Pages

    Sirfraz khan English 1A 12:30 – 2:00 Research essay Today’s society moves way faster then it used to move. Now a day’s people want to move faster and get things done a lot easier by doing such things at the same time. There are many incidents where people tend to multitask and in some ways there are positives to multitasking and some are negatives to multitasking. Multitasking concerns a lot of college students, due to not having enough time or just trying to finish more than one thing at a time

  • Politcal Liberals and Conservatives

    853 Words  | 2 Pages

    from very liberal to very conservative. Even though this may seem like a simple measure, it a... ... middle of paper ... ...ygdala and the ACC with political attitudes (Kanai et al, 2011). For example, an individual with a large anterior cingulate cortex has a higher capacity to tolerate uncertainty and conflicts and therefore would most likely accept more liberal views. However, every brain region customarily partakes in multiple psychological processes. Therefore, results only offer possible

  • Informative Essay On Ocd

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    that have been proven to treat OCD by the International OCD Foundation. The first of these surgeries is referred to as anterior cingulotomy. The procedures involve “drilling into the skull and burning an area of the brain called the anterior cingulate cortex with a heated probe (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, n.d.).” This option has benefitted 50 percent of patients. The second psychosurgery is called anterior capsulotomy. It is similar to anterior cingulotomy, except doctors operate on the anterior

  • Mindfulness Meditation and The Reduction of Anxiety

    1055 Words  | 3 Pages

    Mindfulness Meditation and The Reduction of Anxiety Mindfulness meditation is a form of meditation that has been prevalent for thousands of years, and is only becoming increasingly more popular. “Over the past decade, neuroscientists like myself have become increasingly interested in studying how meditation affects the brain and body. The number of studies conducted per year in this new field of contemplative science is rising exponentially, with more than 200 studies published last year alone,”

  • Corporal Punishment in Public Schools

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    Corporal punishment is defined as “an infliction of punishment to the body.” My primary reason for not approving corporal punishment would be that corporal punishment creates a negative reaction from the student’s perspective plus additional problems in the end. To discipline students in a way that will harm them into non-misbehavior is not the way to go. I claim that corporal punishment in public schools should not be permitted because it is barbaric, harmful, and in no way a method to solve personal

  • The Joy Of Laughter

    1327 Words  | 3 Pages

    side of the cortex analyzes the words and structure of the joke. Then the brain's large frontal lobe becomes very active. This part of the brain has a lot to do with social emotional responses. After this, the right hemisphere of the cortex helps with comprehension of the joke. Then stimulation of the motor sections occurred, producing the physical responses of laughter.(3) The production of laughter is also highly involved with certain parts of the brain. For example, the central cortex has been found

  • Urinary System

    1828 Words  | 4 Pages

    color. The outside of the kidneys are very tough, but smooth. This is described as a fibrous tunic. The outer part has millions of nephrons which are the basic unit of the kidney. The kidney is divided into two layers. The outer cortex and the medulla. When the outer cortex is stripped off you then get the medulla. The inside you have a thick mesh of muscular fibers. This is also smooth, and very even. It is very red in color, unlike the outside which is of brownish-purplish coloring. It is more red

  • The Effects of Smoking on the Developing Fetus

    1247 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Effects of Smoking on the Developing Fetus The exposure of the fetus to nicotine during development has several effects. The most well known result of smoking is low birth weight of the infant. There are also some studies that reveal nicotine as a drug that can affect the brain of the developing fetus. Nicotine also has direct effects on the neurotransmitter systems in the CNS and may cause a decrease in cell growth which could result in mental impairment. The correlation between maternal

  • Helping Phantom Limb Pain

    1490 Words  | 3 Pages

    Helping Phantom Limb Pain Over the years scientists have noted many complaints of a strange form of pain called phantom limb pain. This pain is strange because it is located in an appendage that no longer exists. By many of the amputees the pain is described as totally unbearable. Phantom limb pain has even driven some victims crazy. For the amputee population this is a very real problem that definitely needs to be solved. After James Peacock had his right arm amputated last December, he

  • Glare of Fashion in Vanity Fair

    1278 Words  | 3 Pages

    subterfuge while blinding those who doubt her with an unconquerable charm. Clearly a perfectionist in the art of deception, Becky Sharp, a young woman with serpentine sentiments, slithers her way into the aristocratic society that composes the hollow cortex of Vanity Fair. With unremitting cupidity, Becky exploits all those she encounters for the sole purpose of ameliorating her own situation, both financially and socially. Commencing her mission... ... middle of paper ... ...little earthenware pipkin

  • The Links Between Child Abuse and Psychological, Emotional, Behavioral, and Interpersonal Disorders

    1164 Words  | 3 Pages

    the body, context perceptions, and holistic perception. The orbito-frontal cortex (the part of the brain directly behind the eyes) is responsible for integrating emotional responses generated in the limbic system with higher cognitive functions, such as planning and language, in the cerebral cortex's prefrontal lobes(Culp). The left orbito-frontal cortex is responsible for memory creation while the right orbito-frontal cortex is responsible for memory retrieval. Healthy functioning requires an integrated

  • Alzheimers Disease

    2696 Words  | 6 Pages

    AD symptoms is a result of the progressive deterioration of brain cells (neurons) in the cerebral cortex of the brain. This area of the brain, which is the largest and uppermost portion, controls all our thought processes, movement, speech, and senses. This deterioration initially starts in the area of the cortex that is associated with memory and then progresses into other areas of the cortex, then into other areas of the brain that control bodily function. The death of these cells causes

  • Depression: Causes or Effects?

    1074 Words  | 3 Pages

    brain-levels of its metabolites, or by-products, in more accessible material (urine and cerebrospinal fluid)-are often low in depressed individuals. In addition, postmortem studies have revealed increased densities of certain norepinephrine receptors in the cortex of depressed suicide victims" (indicating compensatory up-regulation) (1). It is not surprising that deficits in serotonin circuits are also seen in depressed patients, as these depletions may interact with and indeed be responsible for falls in

  • Music Appreciation and the Auditory System

    822 Words  | 2 Pages

    Music Appreciation and the Auditory System Have you ever come home after an exhausting day and turned on music to relax your nerves? While you are taking it easy, your auditory cortex is not. It works hard to synthesize the several musical elements of rhythm, pitch, frequency, and timbre to create a rich auditory experience. First, a discussion of the ear physiology is needed. Vibrating air moving at different frequencies hits the eardrum which causes the middle ear's three bones to move

  • The Movement of Water and Solutes in Plants

    677 Words  | 2 Pages

    osmosis, water molecules move from an area that is hypotonic to an area that is hypertonic. A hypotonic area is one in which has less solute and a hypertonic area is one which has more solute. Plant cells, such as the ones in the epidermis and cortex regions of the roots of the plant, all have living contents, which are enclosed by a cell surface membrane and a thick, quite inelastic cellulose cell wall. The cell wall has special properties, which help the cells resist during the osmotic uptake

  • The Pros and Cons of Adderall

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Pros and Cons of Adderall Why did the ADHD boy not introduce his girlfriend to any of his friends? He could not remember her name; or better yet, why would a chicken be considered ADD? It never gets all the way across the road because of all the distractions. Attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a developmental and behavioral disorder that affects 3 to 5 percent of all school-age children. The American Psychiatric Association explains that, “Individuals with ADHD may know what

  • Alzheimers Disease

    1275 Words  | 3 Pages

    recent advances has produced several clues as to how it is born. Initially when we study the brain of a Alzheimer's victim, we focus on two specific areas. One is the cortex of the frontal and cerebral lobes1. The second is the hippocampus (meaning seahorses in Greek which it resembles2) which is located below the cerebral cortex and responsible for short-term memory. If we study samples of these two section, we would find three irregularities which are not found in normal brain matter. These

  • I Am Fearfully and Wonderfully Made

    1746 Words  | 4 Pages

    "I am fearfully and wonderfully made" "I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; that I know very well"(Psalm 139:14). From what I've been learning about the brain, that is, what we understand and the whole lot that is yet to be understood about its intricate networks, I can marvel along with the psalmist, David. Indeed, we are fearfully and wonderfully made, and our brain is a great testimony of that fact. What would the psalmist have written if he was

  • Limbic system

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    includes a group of brain structures that surround the brainstem such as the amygdala, hypothalamus, thalamus and hippocampus. These are the main structures, but there are also some minor related areas such as the cingulate gyrus, ventral tegmental area, basal ganglia, and the prefrontal cortex. Function: The limbic system is responsible for many human emotions or drives and particularly those that relate to our basic survival. Some examples would be fear, anger and emotions related to sexual behaviour

  • The Galvanic Skin Response

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the autonomic nervous system connected to the sensori-motor strip of the cortex. This change was found to be related to the level of cortical arousal. The emotional charge on a word, heard by a subject, would have an immediate effect on the subject's level of arousal, and cause this physiological response. Because the hands have a particularly large representation of nerve endings on the sensori-motor strip of the cortex, hand-held electrodes are ideal. As arousal increases, the "fight or flight"