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Brain Function How We Investigate and What We Know Basic Structure The Left Cortical Hemisphere Anterior Posterior (front) (back) http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Cortical Surface http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Main Parts of the Brain: Midsagittal view http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Main Parts of the Brain: Midsagittal view—MRI Scan http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Main Parts of the Brain: Midsagittal view—More detail http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Studying Brain Function What brains: ► Animals and humans ► Individuals with damaged brains ► Individuals with intact brains ► Individuals with split brains. Electroencephalography (EEG) and Magentoelectroencephalography (MEG)studies ► Brain mapping using its electrical activity Imaging techniques ► CAT scans ► PET scans ► fMRI scans ► Ultrasound Techniques Studies of Brain Damaged Individuals ► How do brains get damaged? Strokes Aneurysms Traumatic brain injury (TBI) Surgery Illness (e.g., encephalitis, meningitis) Tumors Techniques Studies of Brain Damaged Individuals ► How do brains get damaged? Strokes Aneurysms Traumatic brain injury (TBI) Surgery Illness (e.g., encephalitis, meningitis) Tumors Techniques What Does Brain Damage Tell Us? ► Damage to the brain produces changes and deficits in behaviour. For example, individual may lose ability to handle one or more aspect of language, may have memory loss of various kinds, may have paralysis or sensory loss, or personality change. ► Location of damage is linked to its effect on behaviour. Cortical Surface Right Hemisphere Central fissure Sensory strip Lateral fissure Motor strip Right Hemisphere Damage ► ► ► Damage to the right motor cortex can lead to paralysis on the left side of the body. Damage to the right sensory cortex can lead to loss of sensation on the left side of the body. Damage to other areas of the right hemisphere can lead to difficulty with: ► Attention and multi-tasking. May have left-side neglect. Facial and pattern recognition. Organization, reasoning, problem solving. Orientation Integrating information. Depth perception Social Interaction Non-musicians who have lost most of their spoken language may still be able to sing both the words and the music to songs. Cortical Surface Left Hemisphere Lateral fissure 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. http://www.ohiou.edu/~linguist/soemarmo/ L270/Notes/neurolingvid.htm Broca's area—larger in left hemisphere Visual cortex Wernicke's area—larger in left hemisphere. Motor cortex Cerebral cortex Auditory cortex Angular Gyrus (reading) Motor Cortex as Homunculus Broca’s area contains the lower motor cortex that controls the articulatory muscles. http://www.socsci.uci.edu/psych9a/lectures/lec2notes.html Copyright /Mary-Louise Kean 1995/ Left Hemisphere Damage ► Damage to the left motor cortex can lead to paralysis on the right side of the body. ► Damage to the left sensory cortex can lead to loss of sensation on the right side of the body. ► Damage to Broca’s area relates to laboured, slow speech with impaired articulation. ► Damage to Wernicke’s area relates to speech that is phonetically and grammatically correct but has lost its meaning—word salad. ► Damage in these and other areas can lead to both expressive and receptive language deficits as well as body image problems. Two Hemispheres Working Together Association Cortex ► The association areas are all those areas that connect the various primary areas (motor, sensory, visual, auditory) that we have identified. ► The association areas make up the major part of the cortex and are where the real action is. ► The main functions of the brain take place here—organizing, planning, recognizing patterns, carrying out arithmetic, rational thinking, intuitive thinking, and so on. Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals ► What is a ‘split brain’? Commisures: several different bands of fibers joining right and left hemispheres, viewed from below. Left Hemisphere Corpus callosum: main commissure Right Hemisphere Commisurotomy: Surgical technique that severs the corpus callosum From Virtual Hospital: The Human Brain: Chapter 5: The Cerebral Hemispheres, Authors: Terence H. Williams, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc., Nedzad Gluhbegovic, M.D., Ph.D., Jean Y. Jew, M.D. Copied from http://www.vh.org/adult/provider/anatomy/BrainAnatomy/Ch5Tex t/Section21.html on July 10, 2003 Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals ► Neurological connections are such that sensory input from the right side of the body reaches the left hemisphere first, input from the left reaches the right hemisphere first. ► For vision, input from the left half of the visual field reaches the right hemisphere first, and vice versa. The input from the two half visual fields is integrated at the primary visual cortex. Left Visual Field X Nasal hemiretinas Right Visual Field Right Temporal Hemiretina Optic Chiasm Left Visual Cortex Right Visual Cortex Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals Left & right visual field as person looks straight ahead. Light from an object to the side reaches a different half of each retina . Eyes. The two hemiretinas are marked for each eye. The temporal hemiretina is dark for the left eye and light for the right eye. The shading for the nasal hemiretina is reversed. The neural pathway for each hemiretina continues the same shading. Neural pathways from the nasal hemiretinas cross at the optic chiasm. Temporal hemiretinas go straight back Primary visual receiving area in each half of the occipital lobe. Information from the left visual field ends up in the right visual cortex and from the right visual field in the left visual cortex. It is here that the information from the two halves of the visual field is integrated via the corpus callosum. Left Visual Field X KEY Right Visual Field RING Nasal hemiretinas Right Temporal Hemiretina Optic Chiasm Left Visual Cortex Right Visual Cortex Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals ► Recall also: Motor control is also contralateral. The left hemisphere controls the right side of the body and vice versa. ► As long as the corpus callosum is intact, information flows freely and rapidly between the two hemispheres, no matter which hemisphere receives it first. Either side of the body can be directed to respond and either hand can point to or pick up an object based on input to either hemisphere. Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals Right hemisphere LVF Intact brain: A picture of a key ring is flashed the left visual field. The neural message is then received by the right hemisphere. It is immediately passed to the left hemisphere, which directs the right hand to pick up the key ring. Split brain: Right hemisphere receives the information that the object was a key ring. However, it cannot pass it to the left hemisphere. Only the left hand can pick out the key ring because the hemisphere that controls that hand has the information. The left hemisphere does not know what the image was and cannot direct the right hand to pick it up. Techniques Studies of Split Brain Individuals ► ► ► ► ► Typically, the left hemisphere directs speech. If there can be no communication between hemispheres, what the right hemisphere sees it cannot talk about because it cannot send that message to the left, and speaking, hemisphere. However, because the right hemisphere controls the opposite hand, the left hand could point to, or pick up, what the right hemisphere has seen. If two words, such as key and ring, are flashed simultaneously from the left & right visual fields respectively, the split brain individual will only be able to say he saw the word ‘ring’ because that is what the left hemisphere received. If the patient is asked to use the right hand to point to what she saw, she will point to the ring, because that is what the left hemisphere (controlling the right hand) received. If asked to use the left hand, he will point to the key, because that is what the right hemisphere (controlling the left hand) received. Techniques Studies of Intact Brain Individuals ► Visual half-field presentation, using pictures, letters, numbers, dots, shapes, etc. If individual gets more correct, or is faster, from one visual field than the other, we assume that the opposite hemisphere is specialized for that particular kind of information. ► Dichotic listening presentation. Techniques Studies of Intact Brain Individuals ► Electroencephalography (EEG), Magentoelectroencephalography (MEG) Uses external electrodes to map brain activity. Useful to track timing of electrical signals (temporal resolution). Difficult to determine the source of the signals (spatial resolution). Techniques Computer Assisted/Coaxial Tomography ► X-rays are focused at a certain level as the CAT/CT scanner is rotated around the body. ► As X-rays pass through the body they are absorbed and weakened, creating a profile of Xray beams of different strengths. ► All the various images are read onto a film. ► A computer is then used to backward construct a two-dimensional image of the ‘slice’ of the brain that was scanned by the X-rays, blocking out the images from above or below that level. Techniques CAT/CT Scans Outside view of modern CT system showing the patient table and CT scanning patient aperture Inside view of modern CT system, the x-ray tube is on the top at the 1 o'clock position and the arcshaped CT detector is on the bottom at the 7 o'clock position. The frame holding the x-ray tube and detector rotate around the patient as the data is gathered. Techniques CAT/CT Scans Techniques CAT/CT Scans 3D CT Scan of Chest CT Scan of Brain Techniques Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Radionuclide, which emits positrons, combined with a sugar, is injected into individual. ► Certain types of tissue will pick up more of the sugar, and therefore, the radionuclide, than others. ► Scanner picks up the radiation--the positron emissions. ► Areas with increased blood flow will release greater radiation and be seen as more dense. ► Computer creates images as slices of the brain as a difference between the activity for task under consideration and a control task. ► Imaging Techniques Positron Emission Tomography PET Scan Four horizontal PET slices from a resting brain. Same 4 slices, subject is now listening to music. Note greater activity in right temporal region of upper right picture. Four horizontal PET slices from a resting brain. Subject is now exposed to a visual stimulus with pattern and colour. Note greater activity occipital region—primary visual receiving area.. Four horizontal PET slices from a resting brain. Subject has been given a thinking task. Four horizontal PET slices from a resting brain. Subject has now been asked to remember an image for later recall. The arrows point to activity in the region of the hippocampus in both hemispheres. Note also the primary visual receiving area is activated. Four horizontal PET slices from a resting brain. Subject is hopping up and down on his right foot. Note the activity in the left hemisphere. The arrows point to the left motor cortex. Photos by Michael E. Phelps, Ph.D. & John Mazziotta, M.D., Ph.D. Dept. of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology andDept. of Neurology, UCLA School of Medicine. Found at http://www.crump.ucla.edu/software/lpp/clinpetneuro/function.html Magnetic Resonance Imaging MRI ► ► ► ► ► Based on magnetic properties of protons (hydrogen nuclei) that make up most of water and fat. Scanner passes a powerful magnet over body—protons briefly all line up in the same direction. Protons are then misaligned using radio waves and their varying rates of return to alignment with the magnet are tracked. Produces map of the brain tissue. Images are of high quality. fMRI is functional MRI—MRI scans done during various cognitive activity. Techniques – fMRI Studies A normal volunteer prepares for an fMRI study of face recognition. She will have to match one of the faces at the bottom of the display with the face at the top. James Haxby, chief of the section on functional brain imaging at the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland, adjusts the mirror that will allow her to see the display from inside the magnet. Photo: Kay Chernush. Found at http://www.hhmi.org/senses/e110.html Techniques – fMRI Studies This is an fMRI scan from the study of face recognition. The volunteer's brain is particularly active in an area of her right hemisphere called the fusiform gyrus (arrow) as she matches one of the two faces at the bottom of the display with the face at the top. This "slice" of her brain is seen as though looking through her face. Photo: Vincent Clark and James Haxby, Section on Functional Brain Imaging, Laboratory of Psychology and Psychopathology, NIMH, NIH. Found at http://www.hhmi.org/senses/e110.html Brainstem http://www.driesen.com/cortical_illustrations.htm Brainstem ► The lower extension of the brain where it connects to the spinal cord. ► Oldest part of brain. ► Neurological functions located in the brainstem include those necessary for survival (breathing, digestion, heart rate, blood pressure) and for arousal (being awake and alert). ► Most of the cranial nerves come from the brainstem. The brainstem is the pathway for all fiber tracts passing up and down from peripheral nerves and spinal cord to the highest parts of the brain. Brainstem: Medulla ► Functions primarily as a relay station for the crossing of motor tracts between the spinal cord and the brain. ► Also contains the respiratory, vasomotor and cardiac centers, as well as many mechanisms for controlling reflex activities such as coughing, gagging, swallowing and vomiting. ► Controls orientation of the head, affecting balance. Brainstem: Pons ►A bridge-like structure which links different parts of the brain and serves as a relay station from the medulla to the higher cortical structures of the brain. It contains the respiratory center. ► Responsible for integrating facial sensations and movements. ► Regulates attentiveness. Brainstem: Midbrain & Tectum ► The midbrain serves as the nerve pathway of the cerebral hemispheres and contains auditory and visual reflex centers. Integrates information from eyes and ears. Controls eye movements. Involved in regulating body temperature and pain perception. Works with pons in controlling sleep-wake schedules. ► The tectum is on top of the midbrain and acts as an orienting centre. It serves to direct our body movements toward that to which we are attending. Brainstem: Reticular Formation ► Network of neurons in brain stem that are responsible for arousal and sleep. ► Controls the different stages of sleep. Cerebellum ► The portion of the brain behind the pons that helps coordinate movement (balance and muscle coordination), especially rapid, well-timed movement. ► Integrates motor and sensory input from the body. ► Damage may result in ataxia which is a problem of muscle coordination. This can interfere with a person's ability to walk, talk, eat, and to perform other self care tasks. Brainstem & Cerebellum Damage Problems with breathing, which can also affect speech. ► Difficulty swallowing food and water (dysphagia). ► Difficulty with organization/perception of the environment. May not be able to reach out and grasp objects. ► Problems with balance and movement. May be unable to walk or make rapid movements. May have tremors if cerebellum is involved. ► Vertigo—dizziness and nausea. ► Sleeping difficulties (e.g., insomnia, sleep apnea), particularly if the damage is in the reticular formation. ► If severe, there may be no purposeful behaviour, or can result in coma or death. ► Forebrain Forebrain ► Two cerebral hemispheres, each including: Subcortical structures such as hypothalamus, thalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, basal ganglia. Cerebral cortices Hypothalamus Hypothalamus ► Main function is homeostasis, or maintaining the body's status quo. Blood pressure, body temperature, fluid and electrolyte balance, and body weight are held to a precise value called the set-point. ► Receives inputs about the state of the body, and must be able to initiate compensatory changes if anything drifts out of whack. ► Regulates: Heart rate, vasoconstriction, digestion, sweating, etc. through the ANS. Every endocrine gland in the body, regulating blood pressure, body temperature, metabolism and adrenaline levels through the pituitary gland and the rest of the endocrine system. Other Subcortical Structures Thalamus ► Just above the midbrain. ► Consists of nuclei/ganglia (grey matter) and therefore is a relay centre. ► Passes on visual and auditory information to the primary cortical receiving areas. ► May be involved in attention. Hippocampus ► Essential in learning and memory. ► Recently been found to actually create new neurons. ► Every new experience creates new interconnections in the hippocampus. Amygdala ► Regulates emotional behaviour. ► Processes feelings of fear as well as anxiety and is involved in the experience of post-traumatic stress disorder. ► Plays a role in regulating the changes in heart rate as a result of emotional stimulation. ► Seems to be important in linking emotional experience to events and in establishing emotional memories. Basal Ganglia ► System of structures on either side of the thalamus. ► Relay motor information between the cortex and motor centres of the brain stem. ► Involved in planned motor control of slow movement and posture. ► Area involved in Parkinson’s disease. Neuroplasticity ► Refers to the property of the brain that allows it to change as the result of experience, drugs, or injury. ► Includes several different processes that take place throughout a lifetime and involves several different kinds of cells. ► Occurs under two conditions: Part of normal brain development. Following injury as an adaptive mechanism and to maximize remaining functions. ► The environment is an important influence on brain plasticity. Use It or Lose It! ► ► ► As each neuron matures, it sends out multiple branches increasing the number of synaptic contacts and laying the specific connections from, from neuron to neuron. As we grow older synaptic pruning eliminates weaker synaptic connections and strengthens others. Unused neurons weaken and die. This is how the brain adapts to its environment and how we learn. Neuroplasticity ► Experience literally changes the amount of neural tissue devoted to a structure—the cortical map is changed. Neuroplasticity ► When the brain is injured, surrounding tissue can take over the function of the damaged area. ► Touch on the man’s cheek feels as if his missing hand was touched—brain has rewired itself.