Parts Of The Brain
Parts Of The Brain
Hind:
- Structure that is on top of the spinal cord
- Controls our basic biological structures
Medulla:
- Located just above the spinal cord
- It is involved in the control of breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure
The Puns:
- Located just above the Medulla
- connects the Hind brain, The Mid brain, and the Hind brain.
- It is involved in facial expressions
The Cerebellum:
- It is the bottom rear of the brain
- It is known as the little brain
- It coordinated fine muscle movements
The Midbrain:
- Coordinates simple movements with sensory information
- Most known as the reticular formation. Controls arousal and the ability to control our attention.
Forebrain
- What makes us human
- It is the largest part of the brain
- It is made up of the thalamus, the limbic system and the cerebral cortex
Thalamus
- Switchboard of the brain
- It receives sensory signals from the spinal cord. And it sends them to other parts of the forebrain. Every sense except smell.
Limbic System
- Hypothalamus
- Pituitary Gland
- Amygdala
- Hypothalamus
Hypothalamus
- Maybe most important structure of the brain. It controls and regulates. Body temperature, sexual arousal, hunger, thirst, and the endocrine system
Hippocampus
- involved in the processing and storage of memories
Amygdala
- It is involved in how we process memory
- Deals with emotion as well
The Cerebral Cortex
- Made up of densely packed neurons we call the "gray matter"
- Clial Cells: supports brain cells
- wrinkles bare called fissures
Hemispheres
Divided into two hemispheres:
- Contralateral control: right controls left and vice versa
In general:
- Left hemispheres: logic and sequential tasks
- Right hemispheres: spatial and creative tasks
(The Cerebral Cortex is made up of four Lobes)
Frontal lobe:
- Abstracts thought and emotional control
- Contains motor cortex: sends signals to our body controlling muscle movements
- Contains Broca's Area: responsible for controlling muscles that produce speech
- Damage to Broca's Area is called Broca's Aphasia. Unable to make movements to talk
Parietal Lobe
- Contains Sensory Cortex: receives incoming touch sensations from rest of the body
- Most of the parietal lobes are made of Association Areas
Association Areas
- Any area not associated with understanding receives sensory information or coordinating muscle movement
Occipital Lobes
- Deals with vision
- Contains: Visual Cortex. Interprets messages from our eyes into an image we can interpret
Temporal Lobe
- Processes sound sensed by our ears
- Interpreted in auditory cortex
- Contains Wernicke's area. Interpret written and spoken speech
- Wernicke's Aphasia- unable to understand language: the syntax and grammar is jumbled
Brain plasticity
- The idea that the brain, will attempt to find new ways to reroute messages
- Children's brains are more plastic than adults
The Corpus Callosum
- Thick bundle of nerves
- Divides the 2 hemispheres


Your blog is really informative but I think you should add a video, but other than that it was great, and I love how you organized everything!
ReplyDeleteYour blog is very aesthetically pleasing! I was wondering if you could talk a little more about the Parietal Lobe. Since it takes up so much of the brain, does it not contain anything other than the Sensory Cortex?
ReplyDeleteIncredible set of notes. Made it very easy to read. I agree with Ahmad on the previous comment, and its called the PONS not the puns!! Other than that good job!
ReplyDelete