Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Ways of studying
the brain
- Event Related Potentials (ERPs)
- A technique that takes raw EEG data and uses it to investigate cognitive processes of a specific
event. It achieves this by taking multiple regions and averaging them in order to filter out
unrelated brain activity.
- STRENGTHS
- It is possible to determine how
processing is affected by a specific
experimental manipulation, e.g. during
presentation of different stimuli.
- Can measure the processing of stimuli even
in the absence of a behavioural response. The
processing can be covertly measured without
the person responding to the stimuli.
- LIMITATIONS
- ERPs are small and difficult to pick out from other
electrical activity in the brain, so it requires a a
large number of trials to gain meaningful data.
- Only sufficiently strong voltage changes
generated across the scalp are recordable
- restricted to the neocortex.
- Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
- A technique used for measuring brain activity. It works by detecting changes in blood
oxygenation and flow that indicate increased neural activity in a particular region of the brain.
- STRENGTHS
- Non-invasive - it does not
expose the brain to
potentially harmful
radiation.
- Offers a more objective and reliable
measure of psychological processes
than verbal reports.
- LIMITATIONS
- Indirect measure of neural activity - it only
measures the changes in blood flow in the
brain not the actual activity.
- Overlooks the networked nature
of brain activity, as it focuses
only on localised activity.
- Electroencephalogram (EEG)
- A method of recording
changes in the electrical
activity of the brain using
electrodes attached to the
scalp.
- STRENGTHS
- Provides a recording of the brain in real time. This
allows the researcher to accurately measure a
particular task or activity with the brain activity
associated with it.
- Useful in clinical diagnosis - we can
determine if someone having seizures is
suffering from epilepsy by recording
abnormal neural activity associated with
epilepsy.
- WEAKNESSES
- Cannot reveal what is going on in the deeper
regions of the brain such as the hypothalamus or
the hippocampus, as it is unethical to implant
electrodes into a human brain.
- The EEG signal is not useful for pinpointing activity in the
brain because electrical signal can be picked up by nearby
electrodes. It doesnt allow researchers
- Post Mortem Examinations
- Ways of examining the brains
of people who have shown
psychological abnormalities
prior to their death in an
attempt to establish the
possible neuarbiological
cause for this behaviour.
- STRENGTHS
- Allow for a more detailed examination of anatomical
and neurochemical aspects of the brain that wouldnt be
possible using scanning techniques. Researchers can
examine deeper regions of the brain.
- Harrison (2000) - Researchers have been able to
find evidence of changes in neurotransmitter
systems and structural abnormalities of the
brain associated with schizophrenia.
- WEAKNESSES
- Retrospective approach - limited because the
researcher is unable to follow up on anything that
arises from the post-mortem concerning a possible
relationship between brain abnormalities and cognitive
functioning.
- Individual differences due to cause of death, age,
progression of illness etc are all confounding
variables to post-mortem research.