14 Matching Annotations
  1. Mar 2024
    1. Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.E.) , who believed that it was the brain and not the heart where the locus of the mind resided. He wrote: "It ought to be generally known that the source of our pleasure, merriment, laughter, and amusement, as of our grief, pain, anxiety, and tears is none other than the brain. It is specially the organ which enables us to think, see, and hear......It is the brain too which is the seat of madness and delirium, of the fears and frights which assail us" (Gross, 1987, p. 843-844).

      it was Hippocrates who really understood that it was the brain that housed each function that contributed to human behavior

    2. Early philosophers, such as Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.), believed that one's mind resided in the heart. He believed that since our blood started from the heart, the soul also originated there. Plato (428-347 B.C.E.) argued that the executor of reason was the heart and our animalistic desires and emotions were controlled by the liver

      the ideas behind how humans actually behaved are completely contesting from what we believe today. it is interesting to see how scientists theories have evolved over time.

    3. 1949, Donald Hebb wrote his influential book, The Organization of Behavior, where he introduced the first comprehensive theory on how the brain might create and control complex psychological functioning, such as thought, memories, emotions and perceptions.

      apart of psychobiology's origin an important milestone of the study

    1. Free will vs. determinism is an issue that is far from being resolved and remains controversial even among scientists, including biological psychologists.

      it is actually quite intriguing that the question of whether free-will even exists or not has come up not just in psychology but biopsychology specifically and is still highly debated

    2. hich literally means that the mind and the functioning of the brain (assumed to be entirely physical) are two (dual) separate processes, completely independent of one another.

      mind-body dualism or mind-brain dualism

    3. mind-body dualism or mind-brain dualism,

      this would mean they are completely independent from one another but doesn't there have to be some form of physicality for its function?

    4. his means that the mind, our mental processes and subjective mental experiences, must also be entirely physical processes in an entirely material brain.

      there HAS to be a way to simplify this statement

    5. For example, we now know that damage to an area of the brain known as the primary visual cortex, at the very back of your head in the occipital lobe, will result in blindness even though the rest of your visual system, including your eyes, is functioning normally.

      I've always thought there had to be some sort of physical damage done to the eye for blindness to occur.. this is interesting

    6. destroyed and/or removed as much as 90% of the brain tissue of their animal subjects.  Nevertheless, these animals could still perform basic behavioral and physiological functions. Some who read these results made the incorrect assumption that this meant that animals were using only 10% of their brains.  Subsequently, this interpretation was generalized to humans (Elias and Saucer, 2006).

      Scientists were actually experimenting on animals, which goes to show that this idea that the percent that animals use their brain vs. humans share no direct correlation

    7. Studies of humans with brain damage have revealed that the effects of brain damage are correlated with where the damage is and how extensive it is.

      this disproves the idea that humans only use 10% of their brain

    8. Nevertheless, these animals could still perform basic behavioral and physiological functions. Some who read these results made the incorrect assumption that this meant that animals were using only 10% of their brains.  Subsequently, this interpretation was generalized to humans

      animals were in fact experimented on, and somehow this assumption carried over to humans-despite there being no direct correlation between the two. I find this interesting

    9. The frequently repeated claim that humans use only 10% of their brains is false

      I never realized this was actually a myth all this time

    10. Because all behavior is controlled by the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord), biopsychologists seek to understand how the brain functions in order to understand behavior and mental activities

      we must better understand how the brain functions before we can fully understand the ways in which it impacts certain behaviors and characteristics in humans

    11. With advances in research methods, more complex topics such as language, reasoning, decision making, intelligence, and consciousness are now being studied intensely by biological psychologists.

      Question: Why do psychologists find language and decision-making to be important aspects to study within the field of biopsychology?