Cortical Function Flashcards

(35 cards)

1
Q

Which cerebral hemisphere is dominant in most people

A

Left

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2
Q

Non-dominant hemisphere functions (5)

A

-Attention to both sides of the world
-Music perception
-Emotional significance to events + language
-Complex visuospatial skills
-Emotion conveyed by tone of voice (prosody)

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3
Q

Dominant hemisphere functions (3)

A

-Attention to the contralateral side of the world (usually the right side)
-Language
-Skilled motor formulation

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4
Q

Where is Broca’s area located?

A

In the frontal lobe of the dominant hemisphere only

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5
Q

Where is Wernicke’s area located?

A

In the temporal lobe of the dominant hemisphere only

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6
Q

Premotor cortex vs primary motor cortex

A

Premotor cortex: projects to the primary motor cortex - plans and organizes how movements will happen (what muscles, what sequence, etc.) and tells the primary motor cortex to initiate them
Ex: architect - draws the blueprint

Primary motor cortex: executes the movements by sending signals to the muscles
Ex: construction worker - follows the blueprint and gets the job done

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7
Q

Frontal eye fields (FEF)

A

Located in the frontal lobe, connected to the brainstem oculomotor nuclei. Initiate voluntary saccadic eye movements (quick jumps of the eyes from one target to another)
Control contralateral gaze:
-Right FEF –> pushes eyes left
-Left FEF –> pushes eyes right

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8
Q

Lesion of a frontal eye field

A

A lesion in a frontal eye fields would result in eye deviation toward the side of the lesion

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9
Q

Prefrontal cortex

A

Important for behaviour - executive function, planning, judgement, problem solving, social behaviour, inhibition of inappropriate behaviour, motivation, etc.
*Also urinary continence

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10
Q

Lesion in the prefrontal cortex (4)

A

-Poor planning, judgment, problem solving
-Disinhibition (inappropriate behaviours)
-Lack of motivation
-Urinary incontinence

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11
Q

Function of Broca’s area

A

Speech production
*Also connects with brain areas responsible for grammar

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12
Q

Lesion of Broca’s area

A

Broca’s aphasia= non-fluent speech (comprehension intact)

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13
Q

Function of Wernicke’s area

A

Speech comprehension

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14
Q

Lesion of Wernicke’s area

A

Wernicke’s aphasia= impaired comprehension (can’t respond to Qs, can’t follow commands)

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15
Q

Domains of language (6)

A

-Spontaneous speech/fluency
-Comprehension
-Naming
-Repetition
-Reading
-Writing

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16
Q

Arcuate fasciculus

A

Connects Broca’s area and Wernicke’s area

17
Q

Global aphasia

A

Impaired fluency, comprehension, and repetition

18
Q

Conductive aphasia

A

Impaired repetition but normal fluency and comprehension (due to a lesion of the arcuate fasciculus)

19
Q

Transcortical aphasia:
-What is it?
-Motor vs sensory

A

A group of aphasias caused by lesions outside the main language areas (Broca’s/Wernicke’s) that disconnect these areas from other parts of the brain –> repetition is spared
-Motor: impaired fluency
-Sensory: imapaired comrpehension

20
Q

Cortexes of the parietal lobe (2)

A

-Primary somatosensory cortex
-Somatosensory association cortex

21
Q

Functions of the parietal lobe (6)

A

-Sensation
-Attention
-Spacial awareness
-Calculations
-Writing
-Right-left discrimination

22
Q

Somatosensory association cortex

A

-Receives projections from the primary somatosensory cortex
-Involved in higher cortical sensory functions

23
Q

What part of the brain pays attention to the sides of the world

A

Parietal lobe
-Non-dominant side (usually right): pays attention to both sides of the world
-Dominant side (usually left): pays attention to the contralateral side only

24
Q

Praxis

A

Praxis: the brain’s ability to plan, organize, and carry out purposeful, skilled movements.
How it works:
1. Idea formation - deciding what to do (parietal lobe)
2. Planning - knowing how to do it (premotor cortex)
3. Execution - sending signals to muscles (primary motor cortex –> corticospinal tract –> LMNs)

25
Apraxia:
The inability to perform purposeful movements despite having normal strength, sensation, and understanding
26
Functions / areas of importance in the temporal lobe (4)
-Special senses (all represented bilaterally) -Insular cortex= taste -Olfactory cortex= smell -Auditory cortex= hearing -Wernicke's area -Limbic system -Memory
27
Limbic system - what is it?
The limbic system is the emotional and memory center of the brain
28
Main functions of the limbic system (5)
-Emotion -Memory (especially long-term and emotional memories) -Motivation + reward -Olfaction (strongly linked to memory and emotion) -Autonomic responses
29
Main structures of the limbic system + functions (3)
-**Amyglada:** emotions + motivation -**Hippocampus:** memory -**Hypothalamus:** autonomic control
30
Kluver-Bucy syndrome + features
A behvioural disorder caused by bilateral anterior frontal lobe lesions, involving the amyglada Features: **HHH DOC** -**H - Hyperorality:** excessive preoccupation with oral behaviours -**H - Hypersexuality:** inappropriate/excessive sexual behaviour -**H - Hyperphagia:** overeating, even non-food items -**D - Docility:** loss of fear and aggression, unusual calm -**O - Object agnosia:** Can see objects but can't recognize them -**C - Change in emotional behaviour:** flat affect, lack of normal emotional reactions
31
Circuit of Papez
A neural pathway in the limbic system involved in emotion + memory Hippocampus --> hypothalamus --> thalamus --> cingulate gyrus --> hippocampus
32
Making memories (4)
1. Attention + registration (<1 sec) -Brainstem activating system, frontoparietal networks 2. Working memory (secs - mins) -Frontal lobe (concentration) 3. Consolidation (mins - years) -Medial temporal structures 4. Long term memories -Encoded in multiple cortex areas
33
Dorsal and ventral streams of visual processing
After visual info leaves the primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe, it travels along these two pathways. **Ventral stream:** the *what* pathway -Tells you what you're looking at (object recognition + registration) -Path: occipital lobe --> temporal lobe **Dorsal stream:** the *where* pathway -Tells you where things are (spatial awareness + motion processing) -Path: occipital lobe --> parietal lobe
34
Lesions of the ventral stream of vision cause
-Visual agnosia (can't recognize objects visually) -Achromatopsia (impairment of colour vision) -Prosopagnosia (can't recognize familiar faces) -Pure alexia (can't read)
35
Lesions of the dorsal stream of vision cause
-Akinetopsia (impaired motion sensation) -Simultanagnosia (inability to see more than one object at the same time, to construct a whole from it's parts)