Neuroanatomy Functional circuits in the brain
Contralateral – opposite side Ipsilateral – same side Two Hemispheres Contralateral – opposite side Ipsilateral – same side
Contralateral connections with the visual cortex Ipsilateral connections to the olfactory bulbs Optic Chiasm Contralateral connections with the visual cortex
Diencephalon Thalamus
Thalamus The gateway of all senses (except smell)
GATE Thalamus Lateral Geniculate Nucleus – LGN - Visual Medial Geniculate Nucleus – MGN - Auditory Ventral Geniculate Nucleus – Somatosensory GATE Selective attention Sleep
03-18 Primary secondary W. W. Norton
Primary visual cortex Primary auditory cortex Primary somatosensory cortex Primary motor cortex
05-07 Primary Visual Cortex Calcarine sulcus Retinotopic W. W. Norton
Primary Auditory Cortex Heschl's gyrus (transverse temporal gyrus) Tonotopic
Somatosensory cortex (pre and post central gyrus)
p.65
Homunculus Homunculus
Premotor Cortex (“secondary” motor cortex) Lateral Planning/Intention to move to external cue. Cells fire before movement starts Medial Intention to move based on Internal cues
03-18 Association Areas W. W. Norton
Two Hemispheres Contralateral – opposite side Ipsilateral – same side Left Hemisphere – Input from the right side Right Hemisphere – Input from the left side Contralateral – opposite side Ipsilateral – same side
Two Hemispheres symmetric? Small anatomical asymmetries
Functional Asymmetries Handedness (motor)
Hemispheric Asymmetries Handedness (motor) Language
09-24b Language Inferior prefrontal cortex W. W. Norton
Broca’s Area
Language areas In the left hemisphere 09-25 Language areas In the left hemisphere W. W. Norton
But prosody (happy vs sad voice) In the right hemisphere 10-20 Dichotic Listening Task But prosody (happy vs sad voice) In the right hemisphere
10-21
Hemispheric Asymmetries Handedness (motor) Language Visual-spatial
Global vs local Visual Perception 10-19 Global vs local Visual Perception
Global vs local Visual Perception 10-19 Global vs local Visual Perception
Corpus Callosum connects the two hemispheres
Split Brain Syndrome Visual system Contralateral Roger Sperry Nobel 1981
Split Brain Syndrome Roger Sperry Nobel 1981 Left hemisphere – is the talking hemisphere
Superior parietal cortex Allocation of visual attention Unilateral parietal damage Neglect
Unilateral parietal damage Neglect W. W. Norton
Standard assessment of unilateral neglect 1. Line cancellation task 2. Line bisection task 3. Object drawings
Limbic System Limbic Cortex Hippocampus Amygdala Mammillary Bodies Fornix
Limbic System
Amygdala Fear Conditioning Light + Shock Light only Damage to the amygdala – no fear conditioning
Fear Conditioning in humans + shock Amygdala Important for emotional learning Not emotional response per se Is it only for fear?
Patients with Amygdala damage Impaired perception of fear
also if subliminal Strong Amygdala activation to fearful faces fMRI – amygdala activation
Limbic System
Hippocampus Memory
Patient H.M Hippocampus Surgically removed Anterograde Amnesia (some retrograde too) episodic memories
08-40 W. W. Norton
Hippocampus Memory Episodic memory Consolidation Association
Amygdala damage – no fear conditioning but intact episodic memory 13-13 Dissociation between Amygdala and hippocampus Amygdala damage – no fear conditioning but intact episodic memory Hippocampus damage – normal fear conditioning but no episodic memory of the event W. W. Norton
Hippocampus Volume Alzheimer’s disease
Hippocampus of London taxi drivers Posterior hippocampus – important for navigation