The Brain The Brain Cerebrum Corpus callosum Cerebellum Medulla Pituitary gland Hypothalamus...

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The Brain The Brain Cerebr um Corpus callosum Cerebellum Medulla Pituitary gland Hypothala mus Thalamus

Transcript of The Brain The Brain Cerebrum Corpus callosum Cerebellum Medulla Pituitary gland Hypothalamus...

Page 1: The Brain The Brain Cerebrum Corpus callosum Cerebellum Medulla Pituitary gland Hypothalamus Thalamus.

The BrainThe Brain

Cerebrum

Corpus callosum

Cerebellum

Medulla

Pituitary gland

Hypothalamus

Thalamus

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The Different Regions of the Brain

The medullamedulla controls heart rate, breathing, peristalsis, and reflexes such as sneezing.

The hypothalamushypothalamus controls temperature and water homeostasis. Also controlling the release of hormones by the pituitary gland.

The thalamusthalamus is a relay station, integrating sensory input and channelling it to the sensory areas of the cerebrum.

The cerebellumcerebellum co-ordinates muscle movement and so controls balance, posture and movement.

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The upper part of the brain, the cerebrum is responsible for all voluntary activities, it is connected to the nervous system.

The cerebrum is divided down the middle by a deep cleft into two cerebral hemispheres connected by the nerve fibres of the corpus callosum

The inside contains fluid and only the outer few mm of the cerebral hemispheres contains neurones and this is called the cerebral cortex.

The cortex is highly folded providing a large surface area.

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Functions of the cortex are localised into discrete areas:

Sensory Areas- these receive impulses via sensory neurones from receptors that detect the stimuli reaching the body. The skin has more receptors in some parts of the body than others.Motor areas send impulses to skeletal muscles along nerve fibres passing down the brain stem and spinal cord. As with the sensory areas the part of the body is represented by an area of the motor cortex.

Association areas make decisions and send impulses through the motor areas.

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The main motor area controls the main skeletal muscles of the body and the main sensory area receives input from the various skin receptors all over the body.

The areas are duplicated onto the two cerebral hemispheres, which control opposite sides of the body.

Therefore, those situated on the left cerebral hemisphere are linked to the right side of the body and vice versa.

The regions of the body with many sensory neurones have correspondingly large areas of the cortex linked to them. For example, the lips occupy a larger region of the sensory cortex than the shoulder, because they have more sensory neurones.

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Theses are involved in advanced kills such as visual recognition , language understanding, speech and memory retrieval.

The frontal lobes are particularly large in humans, they are thought to responsible for higher functions such as abstract thought, personality and emotion.

The association areas are not duplicated in the two hemispheres. The right hemisphere has association area for face recognition, spatial skills and musical sense. The left hemisphere has association areas for speech language and language mathematical logical and analytical

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The visual sensory area is at the back of the brain and receives sensory input from the optic nerve. Neurones from the left half of the retinas of both eyes go to the visual sensory area in the left hemisphere and likewise for the right half of the retina. Therefore the two hemispheres see slightly different images from opposite sides of the visual field, these differences help judge distance.