Telencephalon Flashcards
0
Q
Hippocampus
A
- Memory
- important in forming new memories and active in spatial mapping
-
1
Q
Limbic System (Limbus = Border)
A
- set of structures that wrap around the thalamus
- most structures are similar across mammals
- emotion and motivation!!!
- includes (w/hypothalamus) Hippocampus, Amygdala, Cingulate Gyrus, Olfactory Bulb, and others
2
Q
Amygdala
which lobe?
A
- “almond” at the anterior end of Hippocampus in temporallobe, near Lateral Ventricles
- important in EMOTIONAL EXPRESSION, esp. anger and fear
- emotional center of the brain
- important role in reading emotion in others
3
Q
Cingulate Gyrus or “Limbic Cortex”
what type of system?
A
- every time the lower brain system sends a suggestion to the higher brain system it passes through this gyrus, which makes the eventual social/logical decision
- keeps score about whether “this is a good thing or not”
- forms layer immediately inferior to Cerebral Cortex
- engages reasoning about the world
- Re-Entrant system that interacts with Cortex and other Limbic structures to assess good/bad
4
Q
Olfactory Bulb
A
- carry smell information to the brain - feeds directly into the limbic system
- extends on stalk out of brain toward nasal cavity
- receives input from olfactory receptors in nasal cavity
- after endogenous processing, axons go directly to Olfactory Cortex - important exchange w/rest of Limbic System responsible for emotional-memory-evoking capacity of smell
- also, olfaction is enhanced if emotionally aroused (hungry, thirsty, fearful, or sexually aroused)
6
Q
Basal Forebrain
main source of?
implicated in what diseases?
A
- cortical area just anterior to Hypothalamus
- includes key structures for attention, and especially AROUSAL of Cortex
- wakes you up in the morning
- projects to Cortex, main source of ACh (excitatory NT Acetylcholine) in brain
- implicated in sleep/arousal cycles, Parkinson’s Disease, and Alzheimer’s
- as you become elderly and have problems with memory, it may be that you have insufficient ACh to activate your memories - targets specific areas: specialized nuclei that are specific to language processing
7
Q
Basal Ganglia
A
- complex set of sub-cortical structures including Caudate Nucleus, Putamen, and Globus Pallidus
- testing task compliance
- it’s a higher motor center: organizes activities in terms of tasks
- automated processes like: walking, driving a car,
- connects to the Amygdala
- lateral to most of Limbic System structures, acts as a major interface between them and the Cortex
- a “Re-Entrant” system whose most abundant connections are to the Frontal Cortex - Involved in the CONTROL OF MOVEMENT, esp PLANNED SEQUENTIAL behaviors, mediated by memory and emotion
- involved in TASK-SETTING, implicated in deficits like OCD and ADD - Degeneration of Midbrain neurons whos axons reach Basal Ganglia = Parkinson’s Disease
- with its symptoms of tremors, rigidity of limbs, poor balance, and difficulty in initiating movements - organizes the tasks you’ve learned