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Published byDelphia Melissa McGee Modified over 9 years ago
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Get out a sheet of paper and letter it A through E
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Can you label the pieces? A C D E B: splits hemispheres
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White matter MRI imaging Impulses originating in the right hemisphere are often processed in the left, and vice versa.
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The Cerebral Cortex Cerebrum divided into four lobes – named for the skull bones that cover them…
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Functional areas Sensory areas for input for different kinds of sensory information Motor Areas: control voluntary motions Association areas – integrate input with information from other parts of the brain
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Functional areas of the lobes Frontal lobe—conscious thought; problem solving, decision making, learning, speech, motor cortex. Frontal lobe Intellect, personality Damage can result in mood changes, social differences, etc. most uniquely human of all the brain structures.
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Functional areas of the lobes Parietal lobe—integrating sensory information Parietal lobe manipulation of objects visuospatial processing Speech and reading, touch, language, taste, attention
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Functional areas of the lobes Occipital lobe—sense of sight; lesions can produce hallucinations Occipital lobe
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Functional areas of the lobes Temporal lobe—senses of smell and sound, as well as processing of complex stimuli like faces and scenes. Temporal lobe Memory!
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Motor cortex – send commands to skeletal muscles, respond to sensory stimuli Somatosensory cortex – receives and partially integrates signals from touch, pain, pressure, and temperature receptors throughout the body.
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Homunculus = little man Proportion devoted to a particular part of the body is correlated to the relative importance of information for that part of the body.
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Phantom limb syndrome
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Premotor cortex Skilled/planned movement Use of abstract rules to perform tasks Spatial guidance of movement ?
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Somatosensory association area Integrates sensations with meaning Taps into memories Olfaction is closely linked to emotions
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Broca’s Area Special motor speech area Directs muscles of the tongue, throat and lips Speech production
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Wernicke’s Area Sounding out words Associated with written and spoken language Damage to this area = can read, but does not attach meaning to words
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Memory: hippocampus
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Memory: amygdala
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Limbic System Emotions Memory Motivation
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