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Chapter 49.2 - Notes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Specific brain structures arise during embryonic development Cerebrum, the part of the brain that lies just beneath the skull, it divided into the right and left cerebral hemispheres. It is responsible for many activities such as calculation, contemplation, learning, emotions and memory A thick band of axons known as corpus callosum enables the right and left cerebral cortices to communicate The cerebellum coordinates movement and balance and helps in learning and remembering motor skills, as well as receiving sensory information about the positions of the joints and the lengths of the muscle and input from the auditory and visual systems, such as hand eye coordination The diencephalon gives rise to the thalamus, hypothalamus and epithalamus The thalamus is the main input center for sensory information, all senses are sorted in the thalamus and sent to the appropriate cerebral centers The hypothalamus contains the body’s thermostat and the central biological clock; it also controls the pituitary gland. The hypothalamus also regulates hunger and thirst, as well as sexual behavior and the fight or flight response The brainstem consists of the midbrain, pons and the medulla oblongata The midbrain receives and integrates several types of sensory information and sends it to specific regions of the forebrain A major function of the pons and medulla is to transfer information between the PNS and the midbrain and forebrain, as well as coordinating the large scale body movements, such as running and climbing The medulla also controls several automatic homeostasis functions such as breathing, heart and blood vessel activity, swallowing, vomiting and digestion As a human embryo develops, the neural tube forms three anterior bulges – forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain The midbrain and parts of the hindbrain develop into the brainstem, a stalk that joins with the spinal cord The rest of the hindbrain forms the cerebellum The forebrain develops into the diencephalon, including the neuroendocrine tissue of the brain and the telencephalon, which becomes the cerebrum The brainstem and cerebrum control arousal and sleep Arousal is a state of awareness of the external world Sleep is a state in which external stimuli are received but not consciously perceived Sleep is also an active state Although sleep is essential for survival, we still know very little about its function, one hypothesis is that sleep and dreams are involved in consolidating learning and memory The core of the brainstem has a diffuse network of neurons called the reticular formation, which partially controls arousal and sleep Acting as a sensory filter the reticular formation determines which incoming information reaches the cerebrum. The more information the cerebrum receives the more alert the person is, although the brain often ignores certain stimuli while actively processing other inputs • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The hormone melatonin is produced by the pineal gland and plays a role in bird and mammal sleep cycles, because peak melatonin secretion occurs at night (This system of neurons distributed throughout the core of the brainstem filters sensor input (blue arrows), blocking familiar and repetitive information that constantly enters the nervous system. It sends the filtered input to the cerebral cortex (green arrows).) Dolphins sleep with one brain hemisphere at a time and are therefore able to swim while being “asleep” (EEG recordings were made separately for the two sides of a dolphin‘s brain. Low frequency activity was recorded in one hemisphere while higher frequency activity typical of being awake was recorded in the other hemisphere.) Cycles of sleep and wakefulness are examples of circadian rhythms, a daily cycles of biological activity Mammalian circadian rhythms rely on a biological clock, a molecular mechanism that directs periodic gene expression Biological clocks are typically synchronized to light and dark cycles, they can maintain a roughly 24 hour cycle even in the absence of environmental cues Circadian rhythms are coordinated by a group of neurons in the hypothalamus called the Suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) In response to transmission of sensory information by the eyes, the SCN acts as a pacemaker, synchronizing the biological clock in cells throughout the body to the natural cycles of day lengths SCN also determines the circadian rhythm of the whole animal (Wild type hamster – 24 hours, T hamster – 20 hours, absence of external cues, to determine if the SCN controls the circadian rhythm, surgically removed the SCN from wild type and T hamsters, transplant of an SCN from a hamster of the opposite genotype) Generation and experience of emotions involve many brain structures including the amygdala, hippocampus, and parts of the thalamus These structures are grouped as the limbic system The limbic system also functions in motivation, olfaction, behavior and memory Generation and experience of emotion also require interaction between the limbic system and sensory areas of the cerebrum The structure most important to the storage of emotion in the memory is the amygdala Emotional experiences are often stored as memories that can be recalled by similar circumstances. In the case of fear, emotional memory is stored separately from the memory system that supports explicit recall of events Damage to the amygdala results in reduced capacity for emotional memory (Functional brain imaging I is aiding the investigation of recovery from stroke and other brain traumas, as well as helping map abnormalities in migraine headaches, dyslexia and many psychiatric disorders)