Brain fingerprinting

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    Composition 102 is similar to being shipwrecked on a remote island. This situation forces trepidation to surface and this can often lead to fear. However, being stranded requires utilization of investigation. skills, personal experiences, and plain old ingenuity to successful return to civilizations. Exploration is essential for surviving on the island and in composition 102. This course demands that explorations of personal values, attitudes, and thoughts to effectively examine the issues that

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    Alzheimer’s disease, considered the most common form of dementia, is a degenerative brain disorder which leads to loss of memory and decline of cognitive thinking. Alzheimer’s disease effects over 5 million Americans, a number which is expected to triple in the projected future, and is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States (Dougherty, R.J., et al). Majority of these affected people are sixty-five years of age or older and have what is called late-onset Alzheimer’s, whilst a smaller

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    The brain is an astonishing organ of the human body, comprising the majority of the central nervous system. The brain has great control over functions of the body, as a whole. The brain allows for thoughts and actions to be executed on a daily basis. Fundamental functions of the brain include instincts, emotions, behavior, and concepts (Perlovsky, 2012). Further, the brain constantly develops and transforms, according to one’s environment (nurture vs. nature), behavior, and brain injury.

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    various parts of the body to respond to stimuli and maintain homeostasis. In Anatomy and Physiology by Tortora & Derrickson, it is mentioned that the nervous system is separated into two divisions: “The central nervous system (CNS) which comprises the brain and spinal cord, and peripheral nervous system (PNS), which is made up of ganglia, sensory receptors, and enteric plexus which, carry nerve impulses to and from the body” (400). The Anniyas’ peripheral nervous system is also divided into three systems:

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    What is Obsessive Compulsive Disorder? Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is a mental health disorder in which a person gets entangled in a chain reaction of obsessions and compulsions. Obsessions are repeated thoughts, urges, or mental images that cause anxiety. (“Obsessive-compulsive disorder,” 2013) Compulsions are irresistible urges to behave in a certain way, especially against one 's conscious wishes to combat the obsessions. Common obsessions are contamination, losing control, harm, and perfectionism

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    Lauren Slater both authors discuss the control humans have over their minds. In “Who Holds the Clicker” Lauren Slater discusses DBS (deep brain simulation), which is a type of psychosurgery in which electrical impulses are sent to certain portions of the brain to control and change the emotions one feels. She discusses both the positive and negatives of deep brain simulation through a specific patient named Mario and also presents the control DBS can have over one’s mind. Similarly, Blackmore in “Strange

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    Sclerosis affects 2.3 million people worldwide. Multiple Sclerosis patients diagnosed are in the age range of twenty to fifty. Multiple Sclerosis effects the myelin in the central nervous system that disrupts the flow of information that is sent to the brain. This disruption effects your vision, mobility and bodily functions. Multiple Sclerosis has a wide variety of people it can effect. Your age, sex, where you grew up and even certain infections like Mono. There are a few tests that can be done to find

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    imperative for an individual to survive, and if training the brain with music can strengthen those networks, this is a subject of great importance. Since the 1940s doctors have recognized the impacts of music on the behavior of patients with mental disabilities, and from this discovery, the effects of music on a regular developing brain became a subject of great interest. Researchers recognized that there was potentially an opportunity to increase brain development in children resulting in discernable enhancements

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    A Sensory motor disorder is a condition in which the brains ability to receive and respond to information that is integrated through the sense is compromised. Those affected by sensory system disorders are usually oversensitive to stimuli in their environment. In the case of Bernie, he portrays hypersensitivity to sound and visual stimulate secondary to Sensory System Disorder. One theory that exemplifies Bernie’s language development is known as the Cognitive Connectionism Theory. This theory

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    1. Brain Based Research: What does this tell us about young children 's brains and how they best learn? What ideas do teachers of young children need to keep in mind? p. 360-362 According to the textbook, brain based research states that child’s brain is two-and-a half times as active as an adult’s and it creates an estimated one trillion synapses during the first three years of infant’s life. In addition, young children have really powerful learning. They learn through quality experiences and

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