The Human Brain Flashcards
What are the components of the brainstem?
” hindbrain”
Midbrain, medulla, pons
Pons, medulla, cerebellum
Primary Motor; somatosensory; auditory; visual cortices locations and arrangement?
Motor: Precentral gyrus; motor homunculus (lower third face, middle third hand/arm; final leg/trunk)
Somatosensory: postcentral gyrus; sensory homunculus (somatotopically)
Auditory: Transverse gyrus of Heschl; tonotopically
Visual: between calcarine sulcus (most medially); visuotopically arranged (peripheral is deeper) surrounded by supplementary cortices
What are the verbal language association areas located on the dominant/left hemisphere?
note wernickes connected by arcuate fasciculus (conductance aphasia)
Wernickes: Speech recognition (sensory/fluent function). Damage would cause fluent aphasia
Brocas: Motor function of speech, IFG, non fluent aphasia
SMAGLA: On inferior parietal lobule, reading and writing recognition
Exners: motor function of writing
What is represented in the non dominant (right) hemisphere and lesions can cause what?
Non verbal language (95%)- loss of
Emotional expression- speech lacks it
Spatial skills- disorientation and inability to recognise familiar objects
Conceptual understanding
Artistic/musical skills- loss of appreciation
Frontal Association Cortex
Intelligence; mood; behaviour; cognitive function
Parietal Association Cortex (sup lobule more?)
Spatial Skills; 3D recognition; shapes faces
Temporal Association cortex (inferior area?)
memory; mood; aggression; intelligence
What do the cerebral arteries contribute to laterally?
Anterior: leg thigh and foot in terms on homculus, stops at SPL
Middle: lateral 2/3 of the cerebral cortex. Stops at level of the ‘trunk’ (homunculus)
Posterior: Does visual cortex and lower part of temporal
Cerebral Arteries and medial view
Anterior: From POS to frontal pole
Middle:
Posterior: primary visual cortex and supplementary cortices plus temporal lobe e.g mood memory.
What are the two (broad) types of neurones in the brain (grey matter) and what are their characteristics?
Pyramidal neurons: Triangular base, with an apical dendrite and many basal dendrites. Have a long axon as such are efferent neurons, Connect with other parts of the cortex.
Granule/ Stellate neurones: Very small, round cells, small axon. Are local circuit neurones/ interneurons. Communicate with close neurons.
What are association/ commissural fibres?
Pyramidal neurons (effferents) located in the layer in the neocortex.
Commissural: Efferent messages to the other hemisphere
Association: efferent messages to the same hemisphere
What are projection fibres? (corticofugal)
Pyramidal neurons found in layer 5.
Long axons that communicate with the basal ganglia, thalamus, brainstem and spinal cord
Where are the granule neurons located?
Layers 2 and 4`
What are the two types of heterotypical cortex with examples?
Note thay homotypical cortex foud in parietal/temporal cortex and pre frontal
Agranular cortex: Increased pyramidal cell numbers in layers 3 and 5. Less granular cells, due to more outputs. Precentral gyrus, so primary motor cortex.
Granular cortex: Increased granular cells in layers 2 and 4, particularly 4. Less pyramidal. Found in the primary somatosensory (PoCG), visual (CS) and auditory (TGoH, STG) cortices.
What pathway does the auditory pathway take through the thalamus?
Information goes through the medial geniculate body. Then information conveys to the primary auditory cortex. The PAC conveys fibres to the MGB to modulate what information it receives.