Cerebral Cortex Flashcards
3 cortical memory systems
- working memory
- declarative memory
- procedural memory
working memory is
short-term memory, sets behavioral context, critical
working memory is located in area
46 of the prefrontal cortex
declarative memory is
our intellectual knowledge
declarative memory revolves around what brain region?
the hippocampus
Declarative memory - final common pathway of secondary and tertiary sensory cortex are the rhinal cortices in the
temporal lobe
rhinal cortices include: parahippocampal, perirhinal, entorhinal
the rhinal cortices and hippocampus are responsible for forming
declarative memories
which are patterns of association amongst sensory inputs
declarative memories are stored in
secondary and tertiary cerebral cortex
declarative memory also receives inputs from the
prefrontal cortex, amygdala, diencephalon and reticular activating system - they serve as modulating influence on memory formation
procedural memory involves actual execution of
motor activities
procedural memory involves a complex set of pathways and links both
posterior and frontal associations corticies, cerebellum, basal ganglia, primary and secondary motor cortices to form memories of muscle actions
frontal lobe: broca’s motor speech area:
speech output area
area 44
frontal eye field (areas 8, part of 6/9) concerned with the control of conjugate eye movements
broca’s aphasia
no longer can talk but can still understand and write
frontal lobe: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
areas 46 & 10
involved with short-term (working) memory, planning and executive function
top of the nervous system
frontal lobe: orbital prefrontal cortex
area 11
involved with emotional reactions to perceived events, more executive function
temporal lobe: wernicke’s area
language comprehnesion
junction between area 40 & 22
wernicke’s aphasia
no longer can comprehend speech or talk
Layer I of cerebral cortex
synapses
Layer I of cerebral cortex - what does it contain?
axons coming from other regions
apical dendrites of pyramidal cells from lower layers
Layer II & III of cerebral cortex
cortico-cortical projections
Layer II & III of cerebral cortex - what does it contain?
small pyramidal neurons (from layer II) and medium pyramidal neurons (from layer III) - these pyramidal neurons send their axons to other regions of the cerebral cortex
Layer IV of cerebral cortex
thalamic input
Layer IV of cerebral cortex - what does it contain?
thalamus projects its axons into this layer
very large in primary sensory cortex
not really involved in motor cortex
Layer V & VI of cerebral cortex
subcortical projections
Layer V & VI of cerebral cortex - what does it contain?
layer V- larger sized pyramidal neurons that project subcortically
layer VI- neurons that are irregularly shaped
they send their axons outside the cortex all together