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Neuroscience and the Brain. Cerebral Cortex and Hemispheres  Cerebral cortex: outermost layer of the brain  Spread out all the wrinkles-cerebral cortex.

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Presentation on theme: "Neuroscience and the Brain. Cerebral Cortex and Hemispheres  Cerebral cortex: outermost layer of the brain  Spread out all the wrinkles-cerebral cortex."— Presentation transcript:

1 Neuroscience and the Brain

2 Cerebral Cortex and Hemispheres  Cerebral cortex: outermost layer of the brain  Spread out all the wrinkles-cerebral cortex is the size of a bath towel!  Fissure marks the separation between hemispheres  Corpus callosum connects the hemispheres

3 Lobes  Frontal lobe  Motor strip  Sensory strip  Parietal lobe  Occipital lobe  Temporal lobe

4 Frontal Lobe  Complex! Prefrontal lobe: allows us to “mentally travel in time,” to remember past events and “see” ourselves in past situations Frontal lobe: allows us to come up with strategies or plans of action and makes sense of our environments Likely also responsible for social control and following social rules—case of Phineas Gage

5 Motor and Sensory Strips  Motor strip: controls all movement; contained in frontal lobe  If you activate parts of the motor strip during neural surgery, different parts of the body will react and move  Sensory strip: controls all feeling; contained in parietal lobe  If you activate parts of the sensory strip in surgery, the patient would feel itches, tingles, and even pain in parts of the body (most neurosurgery patients are awake during surgery!)

6 Occipital Lobe  Responsible for VISION  Even when your eyes are closed, all images in your thoughts and dreams activate your occipital lobe

7 Temporal Lobe  Responsible for HEARING and SPEECH  Some centers for speech are located here, though they overlap  Most speech areas are only in left hemisphere

8 Hemispheres and Handedness  One hemisphere has dominance—you can tell by what hand you write with!

9 Famous Lefties

10 Hemispheres  Left: verbal or speech material, language, logic, writing  Right: objects in space, art, music, some mathematical reasoning, emotional material

11 Lower Level Brain Structures   Brainstem: “basement” of the brain, begins where spinal cord swells and meets the brain, forming the Medulla   Pons: assists in controlling autonomic functions, sleep, arousal   Reticular formation: finger- shaped network of neurons that extends from spinal cord to the thalamus   Reads and directs nerve impulses between brain and body   Controls alertness

12 Lower Level Brain Structures   Thalamus: all senses except smell are routed through thalamus; also receives the brain’s replies and then directs them to the cerebellum and medulla   Cerebellum: “little brain”  Coordinates voluntary movement

13 Limbic System   Hippocampus: essential to memory processing   Amygdala: aggression and fear   Hypothalamus: regulates hunger and thirst, body temperature, sexual behavior   Smell is routed through limbic system, hence its connection to memory

14 Nervous System  Somatic:  Somatic: controls movements of skeletal muscles  Autonomic:  Autonomic: controls glands of muscles of internal organs, including heartbeat, digestion, and glands  Sympathetic:  Sympathetic: prepares us for defensive action  Parasympathetic:  Parasympathetic: counters the sympathetic nervous system; keeps us in a steady internal state

15 Endocrine System  Linked to neurons through neurotransmitters


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