Where: Where the spinal cord enters the skull
What it does: Controls automatic survival functions
Where: Rear of the brain
What it does: - Coodinates volutary movements and balance.
- Damage=loss of coordinations skills
Where and the parts its made of: On both sides of the thalamus,and is made of the hypothalamus, the amygdala, and the hippocampus
What the limbic system does:
processes and regulates emotion and memory while also dealing with sexual stimulation and learning.
What these parts do:
Hypothalamus- controls hunger, thirst, body temperature, sleep. Also linked to emotions such as pleasure, sexual arousal, etc.
Hippocampus- processes memories for storage.
Amygdala- controls fear and anger. And is almond shaped.
What it is: The UPPER REGION of the brain that we usally picture. The thin layer of bumpy tissue which covers the lower brain structures like a blanket.
How big it is: The size of a pillow case
The corpus callosum connects the left and right brain hemisphere.
Its sometimes cut to prevent seizures
Your left brain hemisphere controls speech, comprehension, arithmetic, and writing.
Your right brain hemisphere controls creativity, spatial ability, artistic, and musical skills.
planning, judgement, executive functioning, organizing, behavioural control.
-information on senses are inegrated or processed here.
-Kinesthetic sense.
-If damaged you would be unable to feel sensations of touch.
enables you to understand auditory information. It plays a role in encoding short term memories.
visual processing (color, light, and movement)
-controls voluntary movements
-left hemisphere controls right side of the body and vice versa
-part of the parietal lobe
-processes and makes sense out of information gathered by our five senses: vision, sound, smell, taste, and touch
The ability of the brain to modify its connections or rewire itself.
Without this ability human brains would be unable to develop from infancy through to adulthood or recover from brain injuries.
Phineas Gage was a railroad construction foreman who survived a servere brain injury when an iron rod pierced through his skull, damaging his frontal lobes.
Where: at the base of the brainstem
What it does: controls basic life functions (heartbeat, breathing, etc)
Damage can lead to death
Where: Nerves in the brainstem
What it does: controls wakefulness and arousal
Damage can cause a coma
Where: top of the brainstem (sensory switchboard)
What it does: directs messages to the cortex
divides cerebral cortex into right and leff hemisphere
fissures create the lobes of the brain
