AQA Syllabus focus:
'Ways of studying the brain, including post-mortem examinations.'
Post-mortem examinations are a traditional method of investigating the brain. They have helped psychologists link behavior and neurological symptoms to underlying brain abnormalities, especially in unusual or poorly understood cases.
Post-mortem examination: the examination of the brain after death in order to identify abnormalities and relate these to a person’s behavior, experiences, or symptoms during life.
What post-mortem examinations involve
A post-mortem examination is carried out after a person has died. In biopsychology, the aim is to study the structure of the brain and look for signs of damage, disease, or abnormal development. Researchers may inspect the whole brain, examine particular regions, or analyze small tissue samples in greater detail.
This method became especially important before modern scanning techniques were available. If a person had shown unusual psychological or neurological symptoms during life, researchers could examine the brain after death and look for a physical explanation. The findings could then be compared with medical records, observed behavior, or reports from family members and doctors.
Because the brain can be directly examined, post-mortem studies can provide evidence that is much more detailed than simple external observation of behavior. However, the method depends heavily on accurate information about the person’s life before death.
How psychologists use post-mortem examinations
Psychologists use post-mortem examinations to investigate whether a particular brain abnormality is linked to a particular behavioral or cognitive problem.

A labeled cortical “map” (Brodmann areas) showing how the cerebral cortex can be subdivided into numbered regions based on cellular structure. In post-mortem work, identifying damage or degeneration in a specific cortical area helps psychologists relate localized abnormalities to functions such as movement, sensation, vision, and language. Source
The general process is usually as follows:
A person experiences unusual symptoms during life, such as problems with memory, language, movement, or emotional control.
After death, the brain is examined for lesions, degeneration, tumors, bleeding, or other abnormalities.
Researchers compare the physical findings with the person’s symptoms.
If similar patterns are found across different cases, psychologists may suggest that a certain area or system of the brain is associated with a certain function.
This method has contributed to the development of biological explanations of behavior because it allows psychologists to connect observable symptoms with observable brain changes. In some cases, post-mortems have been used to confirm whether a suspected disorder was actually present.
Post-mortem research is often most useful in rare or complex cases, where a person showed symptoms that were not fully understood while they were alive. It can also be useful when a disorder develops gradually and the brain changes become clearer only after death.
What post-mortem examinations can reveal
A major strength of this method is the level of detail it can provide. Researchers can identify:
areas of localized damage
widespread degeneration
unusual brain size or shape
abnormalities in specific structures
signs of disease that may not have been fully recognized during life
In some cases, tissue can be studied microscopically, allowing investigators to identify very small changes in cells or pathways.
This makes post-mortem examinations especially valuable in the study of conditions involving gradual brain deterioration.
Post-mortems can therefore help psychologists answer questions such as whether a symptom was likely caused by physical brain damage, whether the damage was limited to one area, and whether the observed abnormality fits with the person’s pattern of behavior. This has made the method historically important in building knowledge about the relationship between brain structure and psychological function.
Strengths of post-mortem examinations
Post-mortem examinations have several important strengths:
Detailed access to the brain: Researchers can examine the actual brain tissue directly, rather than relying on indirect indicators.
Useful for rare cases: Some unusual disorders or injuries cannot easily be studied in large groups, so post-mortems may provide valuable evidence from individual cases.
Historical contribution: Early understanding of how different brain areas relate to behavior was strongly shaped by post-mortem findings.
Diagnostic value: In some cases, the examination can reveal the true nature of a disorder, especially if symptoms were unclear during life.
Another strength is that the method can identify abnormalities that might not have been detected while the person was alive. This means post-mortem studies can sometimes correct earlier assumptions about the causes of behavior or symptoms.
Limitations of post-mortem examinations
Despite their value, post-mortem examinations have important limitations.
Cause and effect are unclear: Finding brain damage after death does not prove that the damage caused the behavior. Other factors may have contributed.
Retrospective data may be unreliable: Researchers often depend on medical notes or personal reports about the person’s symptoms, and these may be incomplete or inaccurate.
Other variables may affect the brain: Drug use, medication, aging, illness, or previous injuries may have influenced the brain, making interpretation difficult.
Small samples: Many post-mortem studies are based on single cases or very small groups, so findings may not generalize to the wider population.
The brain may have changed before death: If a disorder lasted for many years, the brain abnormality found after death may reflect the later stages of the condition rather than its original cause.
Ethical issues: Researchers must deal carefully with questions of consent, confidentiality, and respectful treatment of the body.
A further limitation is that post-mortem examinations only provide information after death. They cannot show the brain working in real time, and they cannot be used to track ongoing changes in living participants. This means they are often best viewed as a method for supporting explanations rather than proving them on their own.
Practice Questions
Outline what a post-mortem examination is in biopsychology. (2 marks)
1 mark for identifying that it is an examination of the brain after death.
1 mark for linking this to investigating abnormalities and/or relating brain findings to behavior, experiences, or symptoms shown during life.
Discuss one strength and one limitation of post-mortem examinations as a way of studying the brain. (6 marks)
1 mark for identifying a relevant strength.
1 mark for explaining that strength.
1 mark for identifying a relevant limitation.
1 mark for explaining that limitation.
Up to 2 further marks for elaboration, such as:
direct examination of brain tissue gives detailed evidence
useful in rare or unusual cases
findings are often based on retrospective information
cause and effect cannot be firmly established
small samples reduce generalizability
ethical issues about consent and respect for the body
FAQ
The brain is usually removed carefully and preserved using chemical fixatives, commonly formalin. This slows decomposition and helps maintain the structure of the tissue.
After preservation, the brain may be:
weighed
photographed
sliced into sections
stained so specific cells or abnormalities are easier to see
Preservation matters because damaged or decayed tissue can make interpretation less accurate.
A medical autopsy is mainly carried out to establish cause of death or identify disease.
A psychological post-mortem study focuses more on linking brain abnormalities to behavior, thinking, emotion, or symptoms shown during life.
In practice, the two can overlap, but their main purposes differ:
medical autopsy: cause of death and pathology
psychological use: explanation of behavior and brain-function relationships
Older cases are often important because they were the first to suggest links between particular symptoms and particular brain abnormalities.
They are still discussed because:
they shaped early theories
they influenced later research
they provide historical evidence for brain-behavior relationships
However, later researchers may reinterpret the same findings using improved knowledge or more advanced tissue analysis.
Yes, in many cases permission is required, especially for research use. The exact legal rules depend on the country, setting, and circumstances of death.
Ethical practice usually involves:
informed consent given before death or by relatives afterward
clear explanation of how tissue will be used
confidentiality
respectful handling and storage of samples
Research ethics committees may also review the proposed use of tissue.
The longer the delay after death, the greater the chance that tissue will begin to break down. This can reduce the quality of the evidence.
A delay may affect:
cell structure
chemical traces
visibility of tiny abnormalities
Because of this, researchers often record the post-mortem interval carefully. A shorter interval generally improves the quality and reliability of the tissue analysis.
