lecture 9 Flashcards

1
Q

Three main areas in cerebral cortex

A
  1. Sensory
  2. Motor
  3. Association
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2
Q

Sensory areas receive what? What are they involved in?

A

receive sensory information and are involved in perception

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3
Q

Motor areas

A

control the execution of voluntary movement

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4
Q

Association areas

A

deal with more complex integrative functions
i.e. memory, emotions, reasoning, judgment…

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5
Q

Main parts of the Sensory areas

A
  1. Primary Somatosensory area
  2. Primary Visual Area
  3. Primary Auditory Area
  4. Primary Gustatory Area
  5. Primary Olfactory Area
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6
Q

Primary Somatosensory Area Location

A

Brodmann’s Areas 1, 2, 3

Postcentral Gyrus of parietal lobe

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7
Q

Primary Somatosensory Area Main information

A
  • receives nerve impulses for touch, pressure,
    vibration, itch, tickle, temperature, pain, proprioception
  • a map of the entire body is present here
    sensory homunculus
  • each point in the area receives impulses from a specific part of the body
  • size of the area in the brain depends on the number of receptors in that part of the body (nothing to do with the size of the body part)
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8
Q

Primary Visual Area Location

A

Area 17

Occipital Lobe

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9
Q

Primary Visual Area Information

A
  • Receives visual information and involved in visual perception
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10
Q

Primary Auditory Area Location

A

Areas 41 and 42

Temporal Lobe

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11
Q

Primary Auditory Area Information

A
  • receives auditory information and involved in auditory perception
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12
Q

Primary Gustatory Area Location

A

Area 43

Parietal cortex

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13
Q

Primary Gustatory Area Information

A
  • Receives impulses for taste and involved in
    gustatory perception and taste discrimination
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14
Q

Primary Olfactory Area Location

A

Area 28

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15
Q

Primary Olfactory Area Information

A
  • Receives impulses for smell and involved in
    olfactory perception
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16
Q

Main Parts of the Motor Areas

A
  1. Primary Motor Area
  2. Broca’s Speech Area
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17
Q

Primary Motor Area Location

A

Area 4
- in precentral gyrus
- frontal lobe

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18
Q

Primary Motor Area Information

A
  • map of entire body here motor homunculus
  • each region controls voluntary contractions of
    specific muscles or groups of muscles
  • electrical stimulation of any point here causes
    contraction of specific skeletal muscle fibers on the opposite side of the body
  • bigger area for muscles involved in skilled complex or delicate movement
19
Q

Broca’s Speech Area Location

Which hemisphere m/c in people?

A

Areas 44 and 45

in 97% of people it’s located in the left hemisphere

20
Q

Broca’s Speech Area Information

A

from here, impulses go to premotor areas that control speech muscles and to primary motor areas

21
Q

Main Parts of Association Areas

A
  1. Somatosensory Association Area
  2. Visual Association Area
  3. Fascial Recognition Area
  4. Auditory Association Area
  5. Orbitofrontal Cortex
  6. Wernicke’s Area
  7. Prefrontal Cortex
  8. Frontal Eye Field Area
22
Q

Somatosensory Association Area location

A

Areas 5 and 7

23
Q

Somatosensory Association Area info

A
  • receives input from primary somatosensory area, thalamus and other areas
  • lets you determine the exact shape and texture of an object by feeling it
  • also memory of past somatic sensory experiences
24
Q

Visual Association Area Location

A

Areas 18 and 19

Occipital Lobe

25
Visual Association Area Information
- receives input from primary visual area and thalamus - relates present and past visual experiences - is essential for recognizing and evaluating what is seen
26
Facial Recognition Area Location
Areas 20, 21, 37 Temporal Lobe
27
Facial Recognition Area info
- receives impulses from visual association area - stores information about faces, allows you to recognize people - more dominant on right
28
Auditory Association Area Location
Area 22 Temporal Cortex
29
Auditory Association Area Information
* lets you recognize a particular sound as speech, music or noise
30
Orbitofrontal cortex Location
Area 11 Frontal Lobe
31
Orbitofrontal Cortex Info
- receives sensory impulses from the primary olfactory area - allows you to identify odors and discriminate among different odors - more dominant on the right
32
Wernicke's Area Location
Areas 22, 39, 40 Temporal and Parietal Lobe
33
Wernicke's Area Info
- interprets meaning of speech by recognizing spoken words - more dominant on left
34
Prefrontal Cortex Location
Areas 9, 10, 11, 12 Frontal Lobe
35
Prefrontal Cortex Info
- has numerous connections with other areas of the cerebral cortex, thalamus, hypothalamus, limbic system, and cerebellum - personality, intellect, complex learning abilities, recall of information, initiative, judgment, foresight, reasoning, conscience, intuition, mood, planning for future, development of abstract ideas
36
Premotor Area Location
Area 6
37
Premotor Area Information
- communicates with primary motor cortex, sensory association areas, basal nuclei, thalamus - deals with learned motor activities of a complex and sequential nature - causes specific groups of muscles to contract in a specific sequence
38
Frontal Eye Area Location
Area 8
39
Frontal Eye Area Info
Voluntary scanning of eyes
40
Which hemisphere language areas in?
Left cerebral hemisphere
41
aphasia
Inability to use or comprehend words
42
nonfluent aphasia
-damage to Broca’s area -inability to properly articulate or form words -know what they want to say but can’t say it
43
fluent aphasia
-damage to Wernicke’s, common integrative area or auditory association area -faulty understanding of spoken or written words - “word salad” –string of words with no meaning