the brain Flashcards

1
Q

what is the cerebral cortex

A

thin outer layer of the brain

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2
Q

3 types of cerebral cortex

A

neocortex, olfactory cortex, hippocampus

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3
Q

how is the neocortex divided

A

lobes = frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital

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4
Q

neocortex lobes divided by which gyri and sulci:
frontal and parietal?
frontal and temporal?

A

frontal and parietal = central sulcus
frontal and temporal = lateral sulcus

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5
Q

how many layers of neocortex

A

6 - differing thicknesses by always 6

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6
Q

6 layers of neocortex

A
  1. molecular layer
    - nearest pia mater (outside) - no cell bodies
  2. ext. granular layer
  3. ext. pyramidal layer
  4. int. granular layer
  5. int. pyramidal layer
  6. fusiform layer
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7
Q

Brodmann’s cytoarchitectural map

A

shows areas of differing thicknesses of neocortex
determine function of areas with lesions e.g. stroke patients, lesions on animals e.g. primates, fMRI and EEG mapping

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8
Q

3 types of area of neocortex

A

primary sensory
secondary sensory
motor
(+ other - associations)

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9
Q

neocortex - primary sensory areas

A

incoming sensory info
goes through thalamus straight to these areas
examples = primary visual cortex (V1), auditory cortex

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10
Q

neocortex - secondary sensory areas

A

near primary areas, for processing of the sensory info
example = secondary visual cortex (V2)

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11
Q

neocortex - motor areas

A

info via the thalamus travels to the ventral horn of spinal cord where motor neurons are

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12
Q

neocortex - other areas

A

association areas
seen more in mammals (especially primates)
example = prefrontal cortex for behaviours, decision making, social behaviour (less seen in other animals)

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13
Q

neocortex - where is the limbic systeme

A

cortex of cingulate gyrus and medial aspect of temporal lobe and the hippocampus
kinda at the “centre” of the brain - seen on a medial view of the brain
responsible for emotions

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14
Q

neocortex - insula

A

“hidden” area unique to humans for sensorimotor processing and emotional regulation
found between frontal and temporal lobe on the “inner/towards the centre” part of the neocortex

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15
Q

neocortex - basal forebrain

A

made of the basal ganglia and amygdala
basal ganglia = “central” area of brain. has caudate nucleus which initiates movements, issues here = Parkinson’s - tremors
amygdala = emotions - fear responses

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16
Q

3 types of white matter

A

commissural fibres
projection fibres
association areas

17
Q

white matter - commissural fibres

A

connects between hemispheres - corpus callosum

18
Q

white matter - projection fibres

A

link cortex to non-cortical areas

19
Q

white matter - association fibres

A

link areas within each hemisphere, cortex to cortex connection

20
Q

thalamus - location, function, and structure

A

location = found in diencephalon (has 2 parts - thalamus and hypothalamus - all within prosencephalon)

function = connecting neocortex to various CNS regions - relay station

structure =
has over 50 nuclei (group of neuronal cell bodies which perform the same function)
connects to neocortex via projection fibres

21
Q

hypothalamus - location, function, and structure

A

location = found in diencephalon (has 2 parts - thalamus and hypothalamus - all within prosencephalon)
divided into

function = regulator of homeostasis

structure =
divided into medial and lateral areas - lateral = motivated behaviour e.g. drink due to dehydration
divided into 11 major nuclei
periventricular region is linked to pituitary gland (ANS)