Lecture 12 Flashcards
Describe the different areas of the brain
Forebrain (cerebrum and diencephalon [hypothalamus, thalamus, pituitary gland]) brainstem (midbrain, medulla oblongata, pons) and cerebellum and corpus callosum
Describe the functions of the brain stem areas
medulla oblongata: regulates involuntary actions (vomiting, swallowing, breathing), has the pyramids where crossover of corticospinal tracts occurs
pons: relay station, some breathing control
midbrain: networks for hearing, eye movement
Describe the 12 cranial nerves and their function
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Olfactory (sensory from nose)
Optic (sensory from visual system)
Oculomotor (controls eye movements, lens shape)
Trochlear (eye movements)
Trigeminal (sensory from face, mouth, control chewing)
Abducens (eye movements)
Facial (sensory from taste, control facial expressions, salivary/tear glands)
Vestibulocochlear (hearing and equilibrium)
Glossopharyngeal (sensory from oral cavity, control swallowing)
Vagus (sensory and efferents to internal organs, muscles, glands)
Spinal Accessory (muscles in the oral cavity, some in the neck/shoulders)
Hypoglossal (tongue muscles)
What is the term for bumps and grooves in the brain
bumps = gyrus grooves = sulcus
What do the basal ganglia do?
control of movement, eye movement, cognitive function
list the lobes and association areas
taste = gustatory cortex smell = olfactory cortex vision = occipital lobe (visual cortex, visual association area) movement = frontal lobe (prefrontal cortex, primary motor cortex, motor association area) sensory = parietal lobe (primary somatic sensory cortex, sensory association area) hearing = temporal lobe (auditory cortex, auditory association area)
What is the purpose and breakdown of the limbic system
cingulate gyrus = emotion
hippocampus = learning, memory
amygdala = memory, emotion
What do the different parts of the diencephalon do?
thalamus = integrate, relay information
hypothalamus = homeostatic effects
pituitary gland = anterior: secrete hormones, posterior: secrete neurohormones made in the hypothalamus
pineal gland = secrete melatonin
What are the 8 functions of the hypothalamus
activate sympathetic nervous system regulate temperature control osmolarity control reproductive function control food uptake influence behaviour/emotion influence cardiovascular activity secrete trophic hormones
What is the function of the cerebellum
comparator: adapt body/eye movements, motor learning, control of movement/posture
outputs to cortex and spinal cord
How can our behaviour be modulated?
by the reticular formation: array of neurons in the brainstem projecting into the brain
4 different systems
1) Noradrenergic = arousal, circadian rhythm, attention, anxiety
2) Serotonergic = emotion, circadian rhythm, locomotion, pain
3) Dopaminergic = reward, motor control
4) Cholinergic = circadian rhythm, arousal, sensory information
What are the different types of memory?
Associative (associate stimulus with response) or non-associative (change in response to repeated exposure to a stimulus)
Short term (working) vs long term (implicit or declarative)
Implicit memory is innate, recall unconscious, demonstrated physically, learned through repetition
Declarative requires conscious recall, expressed verbally,
How does language work in our brain
Wernicke’s area: recognition of speech (receptive aphasia)
Broca’s area: decision to respond and verbalize (expressive aphasia)