lecture 8 brain structure

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Brain Structure and Function

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Page 1: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Brain Structure and Function

Page 2: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

“If the human brain were so simple that we could understand it, we would be so simple that we couldn’t”

-Emerson Pugh, The Biological Origin of Human Values (1977)

Page 3: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Brain• Brainstem

–responsible for automatic survival functions

• Medulla–controls heartbeat

and breathing

Page 4: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

BRAINSTEM Heart rate and breathing

CEREBELLUM Coordinationand balance

Parts of the Brain

amygdala

pituitary

hippocampusTHALAMUS

Relays messages

Page 5: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Reticular Formation

•Widespread connections •Arousal of the brain as a whole

•Reticular activating system (RAS) •Maintains consciousness and alertness

•Functions in sleep and arousal from sleep

Page 6: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Cerebellum

–helps coordinate voluntary movement and balance

Page 7: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Limbic System Hypothalamus

neural structure lying below (hypo) the thalamus; directs several maintenance activities eating drinking body temperature

helps govern the endocrine system via the pituitary gland

linked to emotion (show video)

Page 8: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Brain• Thalamus

– the brain’s sensory switchboard, located on top of the brainstem

– it directs messages to the sensory receiving areas in the cortex and transmits replies to the cerebellum and medulla

Page 9: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Cerebral Cortex

• Cerebral Cortex –the body’s

ultimate control and information processing center

Page 10: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The lobes of the cerebral hemispheres

Page 11: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The lobes of the cerebral hemispheres

Planning, decision making speech

Sensory

AuditoryVision

Page 12: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Cerebral Cortex

• Frontal Lobes– involved in speaking and

muscle movements and in making plans and judgments

– the “executive”• Parietal Lobes

– include the sensory cortex

Page 13: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Cerebral Cortex

• Occipital Lobes – include the visual areas, which

receive visual information from the opposite visual field

• Temporal Lobes – include the auditory areas, each of

which receives auditory information primarily from the opposite ear

Page 14: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Cerebral Cortex

• Frontal (Forehead to top) Motor Cortex• Parietal (Top to rear) Sensory Cortex• Occipital (Back) Visual Cortex• Temporal (Above ears) Auditory Cortex

Page 15: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Brain Lateralization

Page 16: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Our Divided Brains

• Corpus collosum – large bundle of neural fibers (myelinated axons, or white matter) connecting the two hemispheres

Page 17: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Hemispheric Specialization

LEFT

Symbolic thinking

(Language)

Detail

Literal meaning

RIGHT

Spatial perception

Overall picture

Context, metaphor

Page 18: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Contra-lateral division of labor

• Right hemisphere controls left side of body and visual field

• Left hemisphere controls right side of body and visual field

Page 19: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Brain Plasticity

Page 20: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Sensation and Perception

Page 21: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Sensation

• The process by which the central nervous system receives input from the environment via sensory neurons

• Bottom up processing

Page 22: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Perception

• The process by which the brain interprets and organizes sensory information

• Top-down processing

Page 23: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The psychophysics of sensation

• Absolute threshold the minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus with 50% accuracy

• Subliminal stimulation below the absolute threshold for conscious awareness– May affect behavior without conscious

awareness• Sensory adaptation/habituation

diminished sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus

Page 24: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The five major senses• Vision – electromagnetic

– Occipital lobe• Hearing – mechanical

– Temporal lobe• Touch – mechanical

– Sensory cortex• Taste – chemical

– Gustatory insular cortex • Smell – chemical

– Olfactory bulb– Orbitofrontal cortex– Vomeronasal organ?

Page 25: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The sixth sense

• Vestibular balance and motion– Inner ear

• Proprioceptive relative position of body parts– Parietal lobe

• Temperature heat– Thermoreceptors throughout the body, sensory cortex

• Nociception pain– Nociceptors throughout the body, sensory cortex

And the seventh…and eighth…and ninth…

Page 26: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

Thresholds of the five major senses

Page 27: Lecture 8 Brain Structure

The Retina

The retina at the back of the eye is actually part of the brain!

Rods – brightnessCones – color