Physiology Presentation
Physiology Presentation
Physiology Presentation
The history of
PHYSIOLOGICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
PHYSIOLOGICAL
What Is
PSYCHOLOGY?
>The Greek word “Physis” means nature or origin and “logia” means the scientific study
of, hence physiological psychology terms as the branch of biological psychology that
deals with the workings of the brain and body.
>It studies how the different working of the body has a direct link to the brain.
>It involves direct manipulation and recording of the brain by primarily using
surgical or electrical stimulation on animals for research.
>Their aim is to develop theories about how neural mechanisms control behavior.
PHYSIOLOGICAL
The history of
PSYCHOLOGY
>Physiological studies dates back to ancient civilisations of India and Egypt.
>Jean fernel (1497-1558), the French physician who introduced the term “physiology”
>The history of physiological psychology can be dated back to Avicenna, a physician who in
“the canon of medicine” recognised physiological psychology as a treatment for illnesses.
He used to link physical and psychological illnesses together.
>19th century physiologists such as Michael Foster, Max Verworn and Alfred Binet based
on Haeckel’s ideas elaborated on what came to be known as “general physiology”.
Hippocrates
>He is traditionally referred to as the "Father of Medicine"
>According to this doctrine, the body contains within itself the power
to re-balance the four humours and heal itself.
> The Galenical school was responsible for voluminous writings, many of which are still
extant. One emphasis was on the humors of the body, which were believed to be
important in disease. Humours are blood , phlegm , black bile , yellow bile
[It was believed that illness was caused by these humours being out of balance]
>Another was the cardiopulmonary system, including the belief that part of the blood
from the right ventricle could enter the left through the interventricular septum.
>Galen viewed the body as consisting of three connected systems: the brain and nerves,
which are responsible for sensation and thought; the heart and arteries, responsible for
life-giving energy; and the liver and veins, responsible for nutrition and growth.
Rene Descartes
> Rene Descartes was a French philosopher, scientist, and mathematician, widely
considered a seminal figure in the emergence of modern philosophy and science.
> Descartes has often been called the father of modern philosophy, and is largely seen as
responsible for the increased attention given to epistemology in the 17th century.
> In line with his dualist teachings on the separation between the soul and the body, he
hypothesized that some part of the brain served as a connector between
the soul and the body and singled out the pineal gland as connector.
> His discoveries led to the invention of the voltaic pile, a kind of battery that
makes possible a constant source of current electricity.
> the early 1780s, animal electricity remained his major field of investigation.
Numerous ingenious observations and experiments have been credited to him; in
1786, for example, he obtained muscular contraction in a frog by touching its
nerves with a pair of scissors during an electrical storm.
>Again, a visitor to his laboratory caused the legs of a skinned frog to kick
when a scalpel touched a lumbar nerve of the animal while an electrical
machine was activated.
Camillo golgi
>Camillo Golgi was an Italian biologist and pathologist known for his works
on the central nervous system.
>Golgi is also credited with the discovery of two types of sensory receptors in muscle
tendons: Golgi tendon organ and Golgi-Mazzoni corpuscles. Golgi was the first to be
successful in staining myelin component of axon, which he used to discover the myelin
annular apparatus.
>He experimented with metal impregnation of nervous tissue, using mainly silver (silver
staining). In early 1873, he discovered a method of staining nervous tissue that
would stain a limited number of cells at random in their entirety.
>Golgi was the first to give clear descriptions of the structure of the cerebellum,
hippocampus, spinal cord, olfactory lobe, as well as striatal and cortical lesions
in a case of chorea.
> He wrote one of the earliest textbooks in the new field THE
PRINCIPLES OF PYSCHOLOGY in 1890
>Functionalism-
James opposed the structuralist focus on introspection and breaking down mental
events to the smallest elements. Instead,
James focused on the wholeness of an event, taking into the impact of the environment
on behavior.
> The beginnings of modern psychology are usually traced to the year
1879. That's when Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) established the first
dedicated psychological laboratory at Leipzig.