THE CORTEX - MODULE Flashcards

1
Q

Major sulci are given ____

A

names i.e. Central Sulcus q

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2
Q

Large sulci are called ____

A

fissures i.e. lateral fissure

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3
Q

Gyri are named based on…

A

their function and/or their location

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4
Q

The lobes of the brain are named after…

A

the bones of the skull

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5
Q

The ___ lobe is not a discrete lobe

A

limbic

It spans portions of the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes

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6
Q

What are primary cortical areas

A

areas that receive information from peripheral receptors, with little interpretation of the meaning of information

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7
Q

Primary cortical areas are concerned with….

A

receiving sensory information and executing motor tasks

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8
Q

What are association areas

A

Areas that receive input from the primary area and are involved in higher order processing, integrating, and interpreting information

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9
Q

Where are association areas located

A

adjacent to primary areas

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10
Q

Association areas can be classified as either…

A

unimodal or heteromodal

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11
Q

Outflow from the primary motor areas makes up the _____

A

corticospinal tract

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12
Q

Where does the supplementary motor area lie

A

anterior to the primary motor cortex and superior to the premotor area

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13
Q

What is found in the supplementary motor area

A

Motor maps for postures

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14
Q

What is the role of the premotor association area

A

involved in higher order processing and integration of motor information

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15
Q

Where is the somatosensory association area located

A

adjacent to the primary somatosensory area in the parietal lobe

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16
Q

What is the role of the somatosensory association area

A

Interpretation of the significance of sensory information, such as touch, pressure, and proprioception

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17
Q

Where is the primary visual cortex found

A

located on the banks of the calcarine sulcus on the medial aspect of the occipital lobe

18
Q

How is the primary visual cortex organized

A

retinotopically

19
Q

Fibers from the upper visual field project to the…

A

lower bank of the calcarine sulcus

20
Q

Fibers from the lower visual field project to the…

A

superior bank of the calcarine sulcus

21
Q

where is the fovea represented

A

near the occipital pole

22
Q

Where is the visual association area found

A

surrounding the primary visual cortex on the medial surface of the occipital lobe

23
Q

What does the visual association area do

A

give meaning and interpretation to visual information

24
Q

Where are the frontal eye fields located

A

in the supplementary motor area and extend anteriorly

25
Q

What is the role of the frontal eye fields

A

eye movements

26
Q

Where is the motor hand area found

A

It is the hook-shaped segment of the precentral gyrus located just posterior to the frontal eye fields

27
Q

What is the primary auditory area composed of

A
  • The transverse Heschl’s gyri deep within the lateral sulci
  • A strip of cortex on the superior surface of the superior temporal gyrus of the temporal lobe
28
Q

is the ear represented in a unilateral or bilateral manner on the cortex

A

bilateral

29
Q

What is the role of the auditory association area

A

Allows us to interpret sounds and give them meaning

30
Q

Where is the primary gustatory area located

A

In the insular cortex within the lateral fissure

31
Q

what is the function of the insular cortex

A

Involved in consciousness, emotion, self-awareness, and cognitive function

32
Q

Where is the broca area located? what does it do?

A

In the frontal lobe, anterior to the premotor association area. Allows for the production of all forms of language

33
Q

Where is the wernicke area located? what is its role?

A

Spans the parietal and temporal lobes around the lateral fissure and primary auditory area. Allows for the comprehension of language

34
Q

How are Broca and Wernicke areas connected

A

via a deep fiber tract called the arcuate fasciculus

35
Q

What does the arcuate fasciculus allow for

A

For us to produce works that make sense and understand what is said and respond appropriately

36
Q

What does the dominant hemisphere deal with (language)

A

the important language functions of production and comprehension

37
Q

what does the non-dominant hemisphere deal with (language

A

the melody of language, accent and tone of voice

38
Q

What is the role of the prefrontal cortex

A

has extensive connections with other parts of brain and is important for executive function, which includes memory, problem solving, attention, planning, and cognitive flexibility

39
Q

What is the function of the parietal association area

A

involved in orientating our attention in time and space and is highly interconnected with the prefrontal cortex

40
Q

What is the function of the temporal association area

A

Critical for making the link between the visual stimulus of a face or object and its meaning or identity

41
Q

What is the function of unimodal association cortex

A

higher-order information processing of a single sensory or motor modality

42
Q

What is the function of heteromodal association cortex

A

Involved in integrating functions from multiple modalities (sensory and/or motor)