Week 3 Objective 1: Brodmann's areas Flashcards
Brodmann’s Areas
primary somatosensory area is made from Brodmann’s areas 1, 2, 3
somatosensory association areas are made up of Brodmann’s areas 5 and 7
Route to somatosensory area
primary sensory neuron —> spinal column + secondary neuron —> thalamus + tertiary neuron —> brain or brainstem
Bilateral excision of this area causes
loss of ability to differentiate sensations in parts of the body.
inability to judge critical degrees of pressure against the body
inability to weigh objects
inability to judge shapes or forms (asteroreognosis)
inability to judge texture of materials
so pain and temperature preserved but poorly understood
Somatosensory area II
Receives signals from
brain stem (from both sides) visual and auditory
projections from somatosensory area I are necessary, but not the other way around
Layers of somatosensory cortex (I, II, III, V, VI)
I and II : receive input signals from lower brain centers
II and III: send information through corpus callosum to opposite hemisphere
V and VI (deepest layers): large neurons in layer V project to distant areas such as basal nuclei, brain stem, spinal cord; axons from layer VI project to thalamus