Localisation of Function in the Brain Flashcards
1
Q
Outline the Motor Cortex
A
- Location: Frontal lobe of both hemispheres
- Function: Voluntary motor movements (different areas of motor cortex controls different areas of body)
- Impairment if damaged: Impaired movement or paralysis in different areas of body depending on different areas of motor cortex
2
Q
Outline the Somatosensory cortex
A
- Location: Parietal lobe of both hemispheres
- Function: Processing touch sensations (different areas of somatosensory cortex process touch senses in different areas of body)
- Impairment if damaged: Impaired touch sensations (reduced sensitivity of pain) in different areas of body depending on different areas of somatosensory cortex
3
Q
Outline Broca’s area
A
- Location: Frontal lobe of left hemisphere
- Function: Speech production
- Impairment if damaged: Broca’s aphasia (talks in short sentences which take great effort, lacks fluency and difficulty in producing words)
4
Q
Outline Wernicke’s area
A
- Location: Temporal lobe of left hemisphere
- Function: Speech comprehension
- Impairment if damaged: Wernicke’s aphasia (produces fluent speech that lacks understanding and so makes little sense)
5
Q
Outline Auditory cortex
A
- Location: Temporal lobe both hemispheres
- Function: Processes auditory information
- Impairment if damaged: Can’t hear at all if auditory cortex in both hemispheres are damaged, if secondary auditory area is damaged then there will be difficulties in locating sound
6
Q
Outline Visual cortex
A
- Location: Occipital lobe of both hemispheres
- Function: Processes visual information
- Impairment if damaged: Impaired visual perception or blindness. Could result in impaired perception of smooth motion
7
Q
What is one strength of localisation of function in the brain?
A
- Research has received supporting evidence
- Broca’s post-mortem examination found damage to Broca’s area on a patient who had speech production difficulties
- Wernicke’s post-mortem examination found damage to Wernicke’s area on a patient who had speech comprehension difficulties
- Localised to those areas and adds credibility
8
Q
What is one limitation of localisation of function in the brain
A
- Post-mortem examinations are unable to establish cause and effect
- Damage of brain may be due to natural decay after death
- Symptoms observed when patient was alive may be unrelated to damage observed during post-mortem examination (e.g Speech production and Broca’s area)
- Questions credibility
9
Q
What is another strength of localisation of function in the brain
A
- More recent research involving brain scanning through FMRI found Broca’s area to be highly active during speech production, and Wernicke’s area highly active during speech comprehension tasks.
- Supports post-mortem examinations and adds credibility to findings
10
Q
What is another limitation of localisation of function in the brain
A
- Received opposing evidence
- Patient with speech production difficulties was able to restore it in another brain area in the right hemisphere
- Suggests that some areas may be more dominant for functions but not specialised for it
- Other brain areas has the ability to take over those functions once dominant area becomes damaged
- Questions credibility
11
Q
What is the final limitation of localisation of function in the brain
A
- Too reductionist (complex things explained too simple)
- Research found making lesions to specific ares of a rats brain didn’t impair their ability to solve a maze (only did when there was widespread damage)
- Suggests higher-cognitive processes such as learning involves multiple areas of brain
- Psychologists argued its better to investigate how brain areas communicate rather than individual brain areas in isolation
- Questions credibility as brain areas must interact with one another to perform a function