Cognitive functions and organization of the cerebral cortex Flashcards
What is cognition?
Anything that happens ‘in-between’.
ex: memory, learning, attention, executive functions, and consciousness.
Information at this level is complex and multi-dimensional.
What is the cortex?
A wrinkled two-dimensional sheet of layered neurons.
Why isn’t the cortex flat?
The wrinkles allow the cortex to keep a 2D topographical map while increasing the available surface area to increase processing power.
What are the sensory cortices?
Primary and secondary auditory, visual, somatosensory, gustatory, and olfactory cortices.
What are the motor cortices?
Primary motor cortex, premotor cortex, and the secondary motor cortex or the supplementary motor cortex.
What is an association cortex?
Regions of the cortex where an injury causes cognitive deficits that cannot be
explained by impairment of sensory or motor function alone.
What are the association cortices?
Temporal association cortex, Parietal association cortex, Frontal association cortex, Limbic association cortex.
What are the inputs to association cortices?
Primary and secondary sensory cortices, motor cortices, brainstem, thalamus, and hippocampus.
Where do association cortices output to?
Hippocampus, basal ganglia, cerebellum, thalamus, and other cortical areas.
What are the differences between primary sensory areas and higher order sensory areas?
- Primary sensory areas have a high precision map of the sensory receptor surface while the higher-order sensory areas have much less precise maps of the array of peripheral sensory receptors.
- Primary sensory areas receive input from the thalamic sensory relay while higher-order sensory areas receive input from other thalamic nuclei and lower-order sensory areas of the cortex.
- Primary sensory areas have a small receptive field compared to the higher-order sensory areas which have a larger receptive field.
- Injury in the primary sensory areas results in simple sensory loss while injury in the higher-order sensory areas results in deficits of perception and cognition with intact detection of sensory stimuli.
- Primary sensory areas have limited connection to other cortical areas, only nearby areas of the same modality, while higher-order sensory areas have connections to nearby unmodal areas & distal areas in frontal and limbic lobes.
What are some functions of information flow in the nervous system?
- Sensory information is processed serially.
- Each area carries certain computations and conveys
them to the next area, going higher in complexity
and in abstraction of representation. - Higher-order areas project back to the lower-order
areas from which they receive input. - Parallel pathways in each modality lead to dorsal and
ventral association areas. - Goal directed motor behavior is controlled in the
frontal lobe.
What are the principals of Organization of functional areas in the cortex?
1) all areas fall into a few functional categories 2) areas in a category occupy a discrete, continuous portion of the cortical sheet 3) areas that are functionally related occupy neighboring sites
How many layers are in each kind of major cortex in the brain?
Paleocortex (ex. Pyriform cortex, in the temporal lobe): 3 layers
Neocortex (ex. motor cortex, in the parietal lobe): 6 layers
Archicortex (ex. hippocampus, in the temporal lobe) 4 layers
What separates the layers in the cortices?
Cell morphology, type and density.
What are the features of a canonical circuit in a cortical structure?
- Each layer has a primary source of inputs and a primary output target
- Connections in the vertical axis (columnar or radial connections)
- Connections in the horizontal axis (lateral or horizontal)
- Cells with similar functions arranged in radially aligned groups
- Interneurons within layers give rise to axons that extend horizontally (linking functionally similar groups)