Brain and Cognition 2 Notes
Brain and Cognition 2 Notes
Brain and Cognition 2 Notes
Lecture 1.
Luria-Nebraska introduced hypothesis testing in psychology -> had a big influence on how we think
about testing cognitive functioning nowadays. Also the way of assessment he did looks a lot like how
we do it nowadays.
The role of the neuropsychologist is to test what is left of functioning. It is not about damage of the
brain, but what is left of the brain.
A clinical neuropsychologist is not a brain researcher but a scientist practioner whose focus lies on
behaviour and cognition.
The brain has persuasion in daily practise -> it makes you less responsible for your behaviour.
When we age vessels become stiffer and this process can be infected by risk-factors like diabetes and
hypertension. With aging risk-factors like high blood pressure are increasing and small deep brain
vessels infarcts become more prone.
Many of these risk-factors increase with ageing. Depression has a higher risk in younger ages for
vascular diseases.
What you do at a young age is very important for how you age when you get older. When engaging in
a lot of cognitive, physical and social activities you build a buffer for cognitive decline at an older age.
More risk-factors will make you 10 years older than people with no risk-factors when your ageing
(cognitive decline)
Global increase in unhealthy lifestyle -> more risk-factors -> vascular diseases
A lot we can do to stabilize and improve cognition by incorporating a healthy lifestyle and reduce risk-
factors.
Older adults that do a lot of exercise have more oxygen and blood flow to the brain.
Cerebrovascular accident (CVA)
CVA = stroke
40.000 people per year
15% between 18 and 50 yrs
In general it effects older people -> risk-factors accumulate in your life -> we become less flexible
when we get older.
Haemorrhagic stroke = blood from an artery suddenly begins bleeding into the brain
Embolic stroke = clotted material that breaks off from elsewhere in the body (eg lungs)
Haemorrhagic stroke
Supplies blood to the dorsal and medial parts of the frontal and parietal lobes
- Language
- Executive function
- Social cognition
- Behaviour and emotions
Supplies blood to the frontal, temporal and parietal lobes, and deep brain structures (eg thalamus).
Accounts for approximately 80% of all stroke cases.
Common consequences:
- Memory disorders
- Aphasia
- Apraxia
- Hemispatial neglect
- Extinction
Common consequences:
- Hemianopsia or quadrantanopia
- Visual agnosia (e.g., object agnosia, prosopagnosia)
Recovery < 24 hours. But have a higher risk in developing a stroke. People still keep some mild
problems.
TIA:
Cognitive recovery -> 49% cognitive impairments in acute phase -> 31% at follow-up (a lot of
spontaneous recovery in a stroke after 6 months)