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Brain Anatomy

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Cortex is brown. Corpus Callosum is white. Thalamus is red. Hypothalamus is salmon. Midbrain is blue. Pons is purple. Cerebellum is green. Medulla is yellow. Spinal cord is lime.

The central nervous system is composed of the forebrain (cortex, basal ganglia, thalamus, hypothalamus), midbrain, hindbrain (pons, cerebellum, medulla), and the spinal cord (not part of the brain).

 
General brain subanatomy

Cortex

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  • Folded for increased surface area - gyri are the bulges, sulci are the grooves inward
  • Only half a cm thick!
  • Divided into 4 lobes:
Longitudinal fissure divides hemispheres
Central sulcus divides frontal/parietal
Lateral (aka Sylvian) fissure divides temporal from frontal/parietal
Parieto-occipital sulcus divides occipital from parietal/temporal

 
In terms of brain slicing:

  • Horizontal slice is transverse (parallel to floor)
  • Shoulder to shoulder slice is coronal (like a tiara/crown)
  • Nose to back slice is sagittal
  • Looking at side outside: lateral
  • Looking at side inside: medial (mid-sagittal typically)

In terms of anatomical location:

  • Superior is toward scalp (opposite is inferior)
  • Anterior (ventral) is toward nose (opposite is posterior aka dorsal)

Frontal Lobe

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Involved with executive control
Prefrontal Cortex
Precentral gyrus (Motor cortex)

Parietal Lobe

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Integrates sensory information from various modalities (particularly in regards to space). End location of dorsal (where) pathway in visual system. Parafoveal info and orientation. Can test this area using landmark test.

Landmark Task: Damage to posterior parietal causes impairment on landmark discrimination. Monkeys had to choose the covered foodwell closer to a tall cylinder (aka the landmark), which is positioned randomly.

Postcentral Gyrus aka S1 (or somatosensory cortex)
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Area of sensory receptors, like temperature, tactile perception, pain, and other sensory modalities like proprioception.

Parietal-occipital Cortex
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Involved with implicit memory (along with limbic system and striatum)

Inferior Parietal
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Space-based attention is located in inferior parietal

Temporal Lobe

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Medial temporal
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Includes a system of anatomically related structures that are essential for declarative memory (LTM).

Superior Temporal Gyrus
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Wernicke's area: Involved with comprehension of language.

Object-based attention is involved in STG.

 
Medial coronal slice showing medial temporal

Occipital Lobe

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Involved with

Basal ganglia

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Thalamus

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Hypothalamus

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Midbrain

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Pons

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Cerebellum

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Medulla

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Spinal Cord

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Processing

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Vision

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Attention

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Can be either object-based or space-based. Although they are not mutually exclusive possibilities.

Space-based

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Is like a spotlight (purely spatial representation of visual field) (inferior parietal lobe)

Posner Cueing task: Cue above fixation of an arrow pointing left, right, or both. White target of fixation appears either to the left or right. ERP variant shows that attention modulates neural response despite physical stimulus staying the same, in which they are told to pay attention to either left or right side (still fixate center). More response to bar appearing in attended side.

Object-based

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Involves preattentive segmentation of the visual scene (superior temporal gyrus)

Patients with neglect may copy images uniformly throughout visual field but only the right side of all objects

Duncan (1984): Outline box with another line superimposed across is presented, followed by mask. The box and line both had two possible properties, and subjects--when asked to judge two properties of same object--were much better in performance than for discerning a property of both box and line.

Egly (1994): Wanted to make clear whether both space and object-based attention can apply in the same situation. They used a modified spatial precuing paradigm. To measure space-based, they cued to one location within object and examined performance difference for the cued part of that object versus uncued part of same object. To measure object-based, the target might appear in either same or different object while being equally spaced apart.

Hearing

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Speech

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Aphasia

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Aphasia is the loss of ability to understand or express speech (tan tan tan).

Broca's aphasia: Inability in speech production

Wernicke's aphasia: Involved with comprehension of language. Aphasia here involves words making no sense and no syntax, but would sound fine to someone who does not comprehend the language the patient is trying to speak.

Memory

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Declarative (explicit) Memory
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Episodic Memory
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Semantic Memory
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Implicit (nondeclarative) Memory
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Procedural Memory
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Perceptual Priming
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Classical Conditioning
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Nonassociative Learning
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Brain Scanning

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Temporal Spatial

fMRI

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Other Findings/Research

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