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Structure-Function I The Cerebrum Reading: BCP Chapter 7/7A Major Divisions of the Brain Cerebrum Brainstem Divisions are based on developmental origins; they do not sub-serve discrete functions. The Cerebrum A frontal section of the forebrain reveals that the telencephalon (cerebrum) surrounds the paired lateral ventricles, whereas the diencephalon surrounds the third ventricle. telencephalon The cerebrum comprises three different areas: • outer area of neuronal cell bodies (called gray matter or cerebral cortex) • inner area of myelinated axons (called white matter) • subcortical areas of gray matter diencephalon Neocortex 1 Most areas of cerebral cortex are organized in a similar manner (called neocortex): 6 layers deep; in total, 2-4 mm thick • • • • • layer 1, synaptic integration layers 2 and 3, input/output to other cortical areas layer 4, input from thalamus layer 5,output brainstem/spinal cord layer 6 output to thalamus Features: • • • • layers differ in thickness, cell density and type pyramidal cells (output neurons; excitatory) vs stellate cells (local circuit; both excitatory and inhibitory) vertical axons and dendrites give rise to columnar organization layer thickness differs from brain area to area Neocortex 2 Based on cytoarchitectural grounds (as observed in Nissl stained material), the German anatomist Korbinian Brodmann defined upwards of 50 distinct regions of neocortex (1909). Brodmann areas have been discussed, debated, refined, and renamed exhaustively for over a century but remain the most widely known and frequently cited map of human cortex. Brodmann postulated that these areas with different structures performed different functions. lateral view medial view Neocortex 3 Many of the areas Brodmann defined based solely on their neuronal organization have since been correlated closely to diverse cortical functions. For example, Sensory • 1-3: primary somatosensory • 17: primary visual • 34: part of primary olfactory (most olfactory cortex is not neocortex) • 41-42: primary auditory • 43: primary taste (gustatory) Motor • 4: primary motor • 6: supplementary motor Association • 39-40: language comprehension (Wernicke’s area) • 44-45: speech production (Broca’s) Wernicke’s area (areas 44, 45) Broca’s area (areas 44, 45) Neocortex is commonly described as comprising three parts: sensory, motor, and association (higher-order) areas. Neocortex 4 Brodmann areas and cortical functions also correlate well with gross anatomical features of the forebrain. Primary motor cortex Central sulcus Primary somatosensory cortex Supplementary motor Frontal lobe Broca’s area Wernicke’s area Primary visual Primary auditory Superior temporal gyrus White Matter 1 White matter is composed of bundles of myelinated nerve cell axons, which connect various gray matter areas of the CNS to each other. There are three types of fiber tracts: • • • association – connect gyri in same hemisphere (short and long) commissural – connect corresponding gyri in opposite hemispheres projection – connect cerebrum with other parts of brain and spinal cord White Matter 2 White matter fiber tracts connect gray matter areas of the CNS to each other. Within the three types of tracts, major bundles include: Association • short (arcuate) fibers: primary somatosensory with primary motor • long (fasciculus) fibers: connect Wernicke’s and Broca’s areas Commissural • corpus callosum • anterior Projection • corona radiata • internal capsule sensory input from thalamus motor output to spinal cord Subcortical Areas 1 Below the cerebral cortex are a variety of other structures, called subcortical (literally "below the cortex") structures. Collectively, there are three main groups, but not all the nuclei in each group serve the same function. The three groups organized roughly anterior to posterior (and medial to lateral) are the: • basal forebrain • basal ganglia • limbic system Basal forebrain (memory) Subcortical Areas 2 The basal forebrain is a collection of structures located to the front of and below the thalamus (rostral to the hypothalamus). It includes a number of structures including the nucleus accumbens and the nucleus basalis. Nucleus accumbens The nucleus accumbens plays a significant role in the cognitive processing of motivation and reward learning, and in addiction. The nucleus basalis plays a role in the sleep-wake cycle and learning and memory (this nucleus undergoes damage in Alzheimer’s disease). Nucleus basalis (memory) Subcortical Areas 3 The basal ganglia include several subcortical nuclei, including the caudate and putamen (together called the striatum) and the globus pallidus, all lateral to the thalamus. Other components include the subthalamus (diencephalon) and substantia nigra (mesencephalon). The basal ganglia plays a role in the selection of which of several motor actions to execute at any given time. Damage to the basal ganglia can lead to Parkinson’s or Huntington’s disease. Subcortical Areas 4 The limbic system is a set of brain structures located on both sides of the thalamus. Major components include: Cerebral cortex: • hippocampus (not neocortex) • cingulate cortex Subcortical • amygdala • septum Diencephalon • hypothalamus • mammillary bodies • anterior nuclei of thalamus The structures of the limbic system are involved in basic motivations (in particular, hypothalamus), emotion (amygdala), learning and memory (hippocampus) StructureFunction: Cerebrum