Page: Textbook - Chapter 4
4. Brains, Bodies, and Behaviour
Did a Neurological Disorder Cause a Musician to Compose Boléro and an Artist to Paint It 66 Years
Later?
In 1986, Anne Adams was working as a cell biologist at the University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada. She
took a leave of absence from her work to care for a sick child, and while she was away, she completely
changed her interests, dropping biology entirely and turning her attention to art. In 1994 she completed
her painting Unravelling Boléro, a translation of Maurice Ravel’s famous orchestral piece onto canvas.
As you can see on the New Scientist website (http://www.newscientist.com/data/images/ns/cms/dn13599/
dn13599-1_567.jpg), this artwork is filled with themes of repetition. Each bar of music is represented by
a lacy vertical figure, with the height representing volume, the shape representing note quality, and the
colour representing the music’s pitch. Like Ravel’s music (see the video below), which is a hypnotic piece
consisting of two melodial themes repeated eight times over 340 musical bars, the theme in the painting
repeats and builds, leading to a dramatic change in colour from blue to orange and pink, a representation of
Boléro’s sudden and dramatic climax.
Maurice Ravel’s composition Boléro (1928) [YouTube]:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-4J5j74VPw
This is a video clip of Maurice Ravel’s Boléro, composed in 1928 during the
early phase of his illness.
Shortly after finishing the painting, Adams began to experience behavioural
problems, including increased difficulty speaking. Neuroimages of Adams’s
brain taken during this time show that regions in the front part of her brain,
which are normally associated with language processing, had begun to
deteriorate, while at the same time, regions of the brain responsible for the
integration of information from the five senses were unusually well developed (Seeley et al., 2008). The
deterioration of the frontal cortex is a symptom of frontotemporal dementia, a disease that is associated with
changes in artistic and musical tastes and skills (Miller, Boone, Cummings, Read, & Mishkin, 2000), as well
as with an increase in repetitive behaviours (Aldhous, 2008).
What Adams did not know at the time was that her brain may have been undergoing the same changes
that Ravel’s had undergone 66 years earlier. In fact, it appears that Ravel may have suffered from the
same neurological disorder. Ravel composed Boléro at age 53, when he himself was beginning to show
behavioural symptoms that were interfering with his ability to move and speak. Scientists have concluded,
based on an analysis of his written notes and letters, that Ravel was also experiencing the effects of
frontotemporal dementia (Amaducci, Grassi, & Boller, 2002). If Adams and Ravel were both affected by the
same disease, this could explain why they both became fascinated with the repetitive aspects of their arts,
and it would present a remarkable example of the influence of our brains on behaviour.
117
Every behaviour begins with biology. Our behaviours, as well as our thoughts and feelings, are produced by the
actions of our brains, nerves, muscles, and glands. In this chapter we will begin our journey into the world of
psychology by considering the biological makeup of the human being, including the most remarkable of human
organs—the brain. We’ll consider the structure of the brain and also the methods that psychologists use to study the
brain and to understand how it works.
We will see that the body is controlled by an information highway known as the nervous system, a collection of
hundreds of billions of specialized and interconnected cells through which messages are sent between the brain and
the rest of the body. The nervous system consists of the central nervous system (CNS), made up of the brain and
the spinal cord, and the peripheral nervous system (PNS), the neurons that link the CNS to our skin, muscles, and
glands. And we will see that our behaviour is also influenced in large part by the endocrine system, the chemical
regulator of the body that consists of glands that secrete hormones.
Although this chapter begins at a very low level of explanation, and although the topic of study may seem at
first to be far from the everyday behaviours that we all engage in, a full understanding of the biology underlying
psychological processes is an important cornerstone of your new understanding of psychology. We will consider
throughout the chapter how our biology influences important human behaviours, including our mental and physical
health, our reactions to drugs, as well as our aggressive responses and our perceptions of other people. This
chapter is particularly important for contemporary psychology because the ability to measure biological aspects of
behaviour, including the structure and function of the human brain, is progressing rapidly, and understanding the
biological foundations of behaviour is an increasingly important line of psychological study.
References
Aldhous, P. (2008, April 7). “Boléro”: Beautiful symptom of a terrible disease. New Scientist. Retrieved
from http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn13599-bolero-beautiful-symptom-of-a-terrible-disease.html
Amaducci, L., Grassi, E., & Boller, F. (2002). Maurice Ravel and right-hemisphere musical creativity: Influence of
disease on his last musical works? European Journal of Neurology, 9(1), 75–82.
Miller, B. L., Boone, K., Cummings, J. L., Read, S. L., & Mishkin, F. (2000). Functional correlates of musical and
visual ability in frontotemporal dementia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 176, 458–463.
Seeley, W. W., Matthews, B. R., Crawford, R. K., Gorno-Tempini, M. L., Foti, D., Mackenzie, I. R., & Miller, B. L.
(2008). “Unravelling Boléro”: Progressive aphasia, transmodal creativity, and the right posterior neocortex. Brain,
131(1), 39–49.
4. BRAINS, BODIES, AND BEHAVIOUR • 118
4.1 The Neuron Is the Building Block of the Nervous System
Learning Objectives
1. Describe the structure and functions of the neuron.
2. Draw a diagram of the pathways of communication within and between neurons.
3. List three of the major neurotransmitters and describe their functions.
The nervous system is composed of more than 100 billion cells known as neurons. A neuron is a cell in the nervous
system whose function it is to receive and transmit information. As you can see in Figure 4.1, “Components of the
Neuron,” neurons are made up of three major parts: a cell body, or soma, which contains the nucleus of the cell and
keeps the cell alive; a branching treelike fibre known as the dendrite, which collects information from other cells
and sends the information to the soma; and a long, segmented fibre known as the axon, which transmits information
away from the cell body toward other neurons or to the muscles and glands. Figure 4.2 shows a photograph of
neurons taken using confocal microscopy.
Figure 4.1 Components of the Neuron.
Some neurons have hundreds or even thousands of dendrites, and these dendrites may themselves be branched to
allow the cell to receive information from thousands of other cells. The axons are also specialized, and some, such
as those that send messages from the spinal cord to the muscles in the hands or feet, may be very long — even up
to several feet in length. To improve the speed of their communication, and to keep their electrical charges from
119
Figure 4.2 The nervous system, including the brain, is made up of billions of interlinked neurons.
This vast interconnected web is responsible for all human thinking, feeling, and behaviour.
shorting out with other neurons, axons are often surrounded by a myelin sheath. The myelin sheath is a layer of
fatty tissue surrounding the axon of a neuron that both acts as an insulator and allows faster transmission of the
electrical signal. Axons branch out toward their ends, and at the tip of each branch is a terminal button.
Neurons Communicate Using Electricity and Chemicals
The nervous system operates using an electrochemical process. An electrical charge moves through the neuron
itself, and chemicals are used to transmit information between neurons. Within the neuron, when a signal is received
by the dendrites, it is transmitted to the soma in the form of an electrical signal, and, if the signal is strong enough,
it may then be passed on to the axon and then to the terminal buttons. If the signal reaches the terminal buttons,
they are signalled to emit chemicals known as neurotransmitters, which communicate with other neurons across the
spaces between the cells, known as synapses.
The following video clip shows a model of the electrochemical action of the neuron
and neurotransmitters:
The Electrochemical Action of the Neuron [YouTube]: http://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=TKG0MtH5crc
The electrical signal moves through the neuron as a result of changes in the electrical
charge of the axon. Normally, the axon remains in the resting potential, a state in
which the interior of the neuron contains a greater number of negatively charged ions
than does the area outside the cell. When the segment of the axon that is closest to the
cell body is stimulated by an electrical signal from the dendrites, and if this electrical signal is strong enough that it
4.1 THE NEURON IS THE BUILDING BLOCK OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM • 120
passes a certain level or threshold, the cell membrane in this first segment opens its gates, allowing positively
charged sodium ions that were previously kept out to enter. This change in electrical charge that occurs in a
neuron when a nerve impulse is transmitted is known as the action potential. Once the action potential occurs, the
number of positive ions exceeds the number of negative ions in this segment, and the segment temporarily becomes
positively charged.
As you can see in Figure 4.3, “The Myelin Sheath and the Nodes of Ranvier,” the axon is segmented by a series
of breaks between the sausage-like segments of the myelin sheath. Each of these gaps is a node of Ranvier.
1 The
electrical charge moves down the axon from segment to segment, in a set of small jumps, moving from node to
node. When the action potential occurs in the first segment of the axon, it quickly creates a similar change in the next
segment, which then stimulates the next segment, and so forth as the positive electrical impulse continues all the
way down to the end of the axon. As each new segment becomes positive, the membrane in the prior segment closes
up again, and the segment returns to its negative resting potential. In this way the action potential is transmitted
along the axon, toward the terminal buttons. The entire response along the length of the axon is very fast — it can
happen up to 1,000 times each second.
Figure 4.3 The Myelin Sheath and the Nodes of Ranvier. The myelin sheath wraps around the
axon but also leaves small gaps called the nodes of Ranvier. The action potential jumps from node
to node as it travels down the axon.
An important aspect of the action potential is that it operates in an all or nothing manner. What this means is that
the neuron either fires completely, such that the action potential moves all the way down the axon, or it does not fire
at all. Thus neurons can provide more energy to the neurons down the line by firing faster but not by firing more
strongly. Furthermore, the neuron is prevented from repeated firing by the presence of a refractory period — a
brief time after the firing of the axon in which the axon cannot fire again because the neuron has not yet returned
to its resting potential.
Neurotransmitters: The Body’s Chemical Messengers
Not only do the neural signals travel via electrical charges within the neuron, but they also travel via chemical
transmission between the neurons. Neurons are separated by junction areas known as synapses,
2 areas where the
terminal buttons at the end of the axon of one neuron nearly, but don’t quite, touch the dendrites of another.
The synapses provide a remarkable function because they allow each axon to communicate with many dendrites
in neighbouring cells. Because a neuron may have synaptic connections with thousands of other neurons, the
communication links among the neurons in the nervous system allow for a highly sophisticated communication
system.
When the electrical impulse from the action potential reaches the end of the axon, it signals the terminal buttons
to release neurotransmitters into the synapse. A neurotransmitter is a chemical that relays signals across the
synapses between neurons. Neurotransmitters travel across the synaptic space between the terminal button of
one neuron and the dendrites of other neurons, where they bind to the dendrites in the neighbouring neurons.
121 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION
Furthermore, different terminal buttons release different neurotransmitters, and different dendrites are particularly
sensitive to different neurotransmitters. The dendrites will admit the neurotransmitters only if they are the right
shape to fit in the receptor sites on the receiving neuron. For this reason, the receptor sites and neurotransmitters are
often compared to a lock and key (Figure 4.4, “The Synapse”).
Figure 4.4 The Synapse. When the nerve impulse reaches the terminal button, it triggers the
release of neurotransmitters into the synapse. The neurotransmitters fit into receptors on the
receiving dendrites in the manner of a lock and key.
When neurotransmitters are accepted by the receptors on the receiving neurons, their effect may be either excitatory
(i.e., they make the cell more likely to fire) or inhibitory (i.e., they make the cell less likely to fire). Furthermore,
if the receiving neuron is able to accept more than one neurotransmitter, it will be influenced by the excitatory
and inhibitory processes of each. If the excitatory effects of the neurotransmitters are greater than the inhibitory
influences of the neurotransmitters, the neuron moves closer to its firing threshold; if it reaches the threshold, the
action potential and the process of transferring information through the neuron begins.
Neurotransmitters that are not accepted by the receptor sites must be removed from the synapse in order for the
next potential stimulation of the neuron to happen. This process occurs in part through the breaking down of the
neurotransmitters by enzymes, and in part through reuptake, a process in which neurotransmitters that are in the
synapse are reabsorbed into the transmitting terminal buttons, ready to again be released after the neuron fires.
More than 100 chemical substances produced in the body have been identified as neurotransmitters, and these
substances have a wide and profound effect on emotion, cognition, and behaviour. Neurotransmitters regulate our
4.1 THE NEURON IS THE BUILDING BLOCK OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM • 122
appetite, our memory, our emotions, as well as our muscle action and movement. And as you can see in Table 4.1,
“The Major Neurotransmitters and Their Functions,” some neurotransmitters are also associated with psychological
and physical diseases.
Drugs that we might ingest — either for medical reasons or recreationally — can act like neurotransmitters to
influence our thoughts, feelings, and behaviour. An agonist is a drug that has chemical properties similar to a
particular neurotransmitter and thus mimics the effects of the neurotransmitter. When an agonist is ingested, it
binds to the receptor sites in the dendrites to excite the neuron, acting as if more of the neurotransmitter had been
present. As an example, cocaine is an agonist for the neurotransmitter dopamine. Because dopamine produces
feelings of pleasure when it is released by neurons, cocaine creates similar feelings when it is ingested. An
antagonist is a drug that reduces or stops the normal effects of a neurotransmitter. When an antagonist is ingested,
it binds to the receptor sites in the dendrite, thereby blocking the neurotransmitter. As an example, the poison
curare is an antagonist for the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. When the poison enters the brain, it binds to the
dendrites, stops communication among the neurons, and usually causes death. Still other drugs work by blocking
the reuptake of the neurotransmitter itself — when reuptake is reduced by the drug, more neurotransmitter remains
in the synapse, increasing its action.
Table 4.1 The Major Neurotransmitters and Their Functions
[Skip Table]
Neurotransmitter Description and function Notes
Acetylcholine
(ACh)
A common neurotransmitter used in
the spinal cord and motor neurons to
stimulate muscle contractions. It’s
also used in the brain to regulate
memory, sleeping, and dreaming.
Alzheimer’s disease is associated with an undersupply of
acetylcholine. Nicotine is an agonist that acts like acetylcholine.
Dopamine
Involved in movement, motivation,
and emotion, Dopamine produces
feelings of pleasure when released by
the brain’s reward system, and it’s
also involved in learning.
Schizophrenia is linked to increases in dopamine, whereas
Parkinson’s disease is linked to reductions in dopamine (and
dopamine agonists may be used to treat it).
Endorphins
Released in response to behaviours
such as vigorous exercise, orgasm,
and eating spicy foods.
Endorphins are natural pain relievers. They are related to the
compounds found in drugs such as opium, morphine, and
heroin. The release of endorphins creates the runner’s high that
is experienced after intense physical exertion.
GABA (gammaaminobutyric
acid)
The major inhibitory
neurotransmitter in the brain.
A lack of GABA can lead to involuntary motor actions,
including tremors and seizures. Alcohol stimulates the release of
GABA, which inhibits the nervous system and makes us feel
drunk. Low levels of GABA can produce anxiety, and GABA
agonists (tranquilizers) are used to reduce anxiety.
Glutamate
The most common neurotransmitter,
it’s released in more than 90% of the
brain’s synapses. Glutamate is found
in the food additive MSG
(monosodium glutamate).
Excess glutamate can cause overstimulation, migraines, and
seizures.
Serotonin
Involved in many functions,
including mood, appetite, sleep, and
aggression.
Low levels of serotonin are associated with depression, and
some drugs designed to treat depression (known as selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs) serve to prevent their
reuptake.
123 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION
Key Takeaways
• The central nervous system (CNS) is the collection of neurons that make up the brain and the
spinal cord.
• The peripheral nervous system (PNS) is the collection of neurons that link the CNS to our skin,
muscles, and glands.
• Neurons are specialized cells, found in the nervous system, which transmit information. Neurons
contain a dendrite, a soma, and an axon.
• Some axons are covered with a fatty substance known as the myelin sheath, which surrounds the
axon, acting as an insulator and allowing faster transmission of the electrical signal.
• The dendrite is a treelike extension that receives information from other neurons and transmits
electrical stimulation to the soma.
• The axon is an elongated fibre that transfers information from the soma to the terminal buttons.
• Neurotransmitters relay information chemically from the terminal buttons and across the synapses
to the receiving dendrites using a lock and key type of system.
• The many different neurotransmitters work together to influence cognition, memory, and
behaviour.
• Agonists are drugs that mimic the actions of neurotransmitters, whereas antagonists are drugs that
block the actions of neurotransmitters.
Exercises and Critical Thinking
1. Draw a picture of a neuron and label its main parts.
2. Imagine an action that you engage in every day and explain how neurons and neurotransmitters
might work together to help you engage in that action.
Image Attributions
Figure 4.2: “Confocal microscopy of mouse brain, cortex” by ZEISS Microscopy (http://www.flickr.com/photos/
zeissmicro/10799674936/in/photostream/) used under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/
by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en_CA) license.
Notes
1. The break in the myelin sheath of a nerve fibre.
4.1 THE NEURON IS THE BUILDING BLOCK OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM • 124
2. The small gap between neurons across which nerve impulses are transmitted.
125 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION