What can behaviour be?
1) Consious
- eg. writing lecture notes
2) Unconcious
eg. reflex movement from pain
What is leptin?
A protein released by fat cells to:
What does high levels of leptin do?
What is catabolism?
The breaking down of macromolecules for energy usage
What is the ‘hunger centre’ in the brain?
The lateral hypothalamus
What happens if anabolism > catabolism?
Obesity
What is the W/C model for motivation?
How do some foods produce change in mood?
- During stress, typical to see carbohydrate-rich feeding
What does decreasing levels of leptin cause?
1) Stimulates OTHER neurons in the arcutate nucleus which contain NPY (neuropeptide Y) and AgRP
2) Switches off the effects of alpha-MSH and CART
What is motivation?
The driving force behind a behavior can be:
Simple - the need to urinate, eat or drink
Complex - need to sing and dance when happy
Where do the activated neurons in the arcuate nucleus project to and cause what to happen?
1) Lower brain stem and upper spinal cord
- Activates them and increases sympathetic activity
- Causing increase in body temp and BMR
2) Paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus
- P nucleus projects to endocrine organs
- Stimulation of P nucleus causes release of TSH and ACTH
- Act on the thyroid and adrenal gland to increase BMR
3) Lateral hypothalamus
- Feeding behaviour inhibited by somatic motor activity
What did bilateral lesions of a rat’s ventromedial hypothalamus cause?
Overeating and obesity
What are the short-term factors which influence daily food intake?
How are human behaviours complicated when it comes to motivation?
1) Probability and direction of a behaviour will vary with the driving force (motivation)
2) Motivation may not guarentee a behaviour (due to social, cultural influences)
3) Balance conflicting motivations (eg. go to a lecture or go and play cricket)
What does NPY and AgRP do?
Released in respose to falling leptin levels:
1) Inhibit TSH and ACTH
2) Activate parasympathetic nervous system
3) Stimulate feeding behaviour
What are ‘anoretic peptides’?
- Injection of a-MSH and CART mimic the effect of raised leptin levels
What do satiety signals do?
Terminate feeding and inhibit future feeding
What did Coleman propose?
That a soluble factor in obese mice (from the ob gene) fooled the brain into thinking fat levels were normal - mouse continued to eat
What does prozac do?
In the process of eating, what is the motivation and what is the behaviour?
- Behaviour is eating
What does gherelin do?
It is released into the blood stream from an empty stomach
What is anabolism?
The building up of macromolecules for energy storage
What to leptin happens during times of starvation and what does this cause?
Leptin deficiency:
What modifies the long-term regulation of feeding (leptins)?
- Satiety signals are produced during eating and initial digestion