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Brain Cerebrum/ Cerebral Hemispheres Hypothalamus Pituitary Gland Cerebellum Medulla Oblongata Medulla Oblongata Controls automatic and homeostatic activities vital to life including Swallowing Digestion Vomiting Breathing Heart activity Cerebellum Coordinates unconscious functions such as movement and balance Hypothalamus Maintains homeostasis by coordinating the nervous and endocrine system Secretes hormones that are stored and released from posterior pituitary Controls anterior pituitary by secreting releasing factors (that control the release of anterior pituitary hormones) Pituitary Gland Posterior Pituitary Gland: Stores and releases hormones produced by the hypothalamus Anterior Pituitary Gland: Produces and secretes hormones that regulate many body functions Cerebral Hemispheres The integrating center for high complex functions Associated with: Intelligence and learning Memory Emotions Personality Sensory impulses Motor function Organization Problem solving Voluntary movement; contains dopaminesensitive neurons; reward; attention; short-term memory; planning; motivation Auditory perception; processing of speech and vision; contains hippocampus= long term memory Integrates sensory info; important in spatial awareness and navigation Visual processing center Pons Involved with sleep, respiration, swallowing, bladder control, hearing, taste, eye movement, facial expressions, facial sensations, posture Corpus Callosum Connect the right and left hemisphere (facilitates inter-hemispheric communication) Thalamus Regulates consciousness, alertness and sleep Relays sensory and motor signals Cerebral Cortex A sheet of neural tissue that covers the cerebrum and the cerebellum Involved in: memory, Attention Perceptual awareness Thought Language consciousness Animations http://www.pennmedicine.org/encyclopedia/em_Disp layAnimation.aspx?gcid=000016&ptid=17 Brain Lesions Created when an individual suffers brain damage in a particular area. Brain lesions can tell neurobiologists indirectly about the function of those parts of the brain. Much about the functions of the left and right hemisphere have been learned this way Right and Left Hemispheres The brain is divided into the left and right hemispheres They are connected by a thick band of axons called the corpus callosum Left Hemisphere Contains areas important for all forms of communication So, if a person has a stroke that result in damage to the left hemisphere, they may have difficulty speaking or doing complicated movements of the hands or arms. Right Hemisphere Not involved in communication, however it does help us understand words. Specializes in receiving and analyzing information which comes in through all our senses When people have lesions in the right hemisphere, they have problems identifying faces, and locating objects, unable to identify melodies In the 1960, experiments were conducted on patients who had surgeries to sever their corpus callosum (to relieve symptoms of epilepsy) but keeping the optic chiasma intact Scientists projected a picture of a spoon onto the right side of a card with a dot in the middle. The spoon is in the right visual field but ends up on the left hemisphere The person has no problem identifying the spoon (language is in the left hemisphere) If the spoon is on the left side of the dot, therefore in the left visual field, the information goes to the right side of the brain where there is no language ability The person will not be able to identify the object as a spoon If the patient is told to pick up the spoon with their left hand, they can. The right hemisphere can understand it is a spoon even though they cannot verbalize it Chimerical Picture to test split brains patients Figure that is a man’s face on the right, and a woman’s on the left. Patients are to focus on a dot in the middle of the forehead Image of woman goes to right hemisphere Image of man goes to left hemisphere If the patient then looks at complete pictures with normal faces and is asked to point to the face they have just seen, they will choose the picture of the woman (It went to the right hemisphere to be analytically processed) However, if asked if the picture was of a man or a woman, they will say it is a man (left hemisphere – language!) Video Severing the Corpus Callosum (10 min) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfGwsAdS9Dc fMRI: functional magnetic resonance imaging When a particular part of the brain is active, it requires more oxygen Oxyhemoglobin responds different to a magnetic field than de-oxyhemoglobin Scientists can ask a patient to perform tasks or expose them to stimuli and then observe which areas blood flow increases in. Animal Experiments? Ethical issues? “Con” side say that human brains are quite different from animal brains and thus, needless animal cruelty. “Pro” side do not agree and claim that primate brain research has provided important information. Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Control Autonomic nervous system: involuntary control Divided into the sympathetic and parasympathetic Sympathetic: involved in action Fight or flight Impulses will increase heart rate, dilate irises, redistrubute blood flow to muscles… Parasympathetic: involved in process that occur at rest Reduce heart rate Constrict pupils Redistribute blood to gut to facilitate in digestion Pupil Reflex Enough light must fall on the retina so that the individual can see properly. Too much light can cause damage to the retina. The pupil will be dilated in dim light – allowing more light into the eye, and constrict in bright light Pupil Reflex The size of the pupil is controlled by the iris which surrounds it. The iris is made of circular and radial muscles When bright light is precieved by the retina, an impulse is sent to the midbrain, and then back to the eye causing the circular muscle to contract and the radial muscles to relax constricting pupils When the circular muscle relaxes and the radial muscles contract, the pupil becomes larger (dilated) Brain Death The permanent absence of measurable brain activity It is possible to maintain processes such as cardiac function and respiratory function for a long time without the patient responding to signals fMRI may be used to determine brain activity When it is presumed that there is no longer any form of consciousness, doctors are allowed to declare the patient dead and turn off life support equipment Brain Death Brain death is different from a coma or a vegetative state – in which there is a measurable amount of brain activity Brain Death – ways to confrim Absence of a pupillary reflex is an indication that cranial reflexes are absent and the patient is brain dead. Absence of gag reflex Absence of respiratory response Absence of corneal reflex Injection of radioisotopes and us of an electroencephalogram (EEG) Endorphins Pain informs us that there is a problem somewhere and alerts us so we can help fix the problem and reduce damage. Pain receptors are nerve endings in the skin and other organs. They response to chemicals released by blood vessels when they become damaged. Endorphins Pain receptors cause sensory neurons to initiate and action potential that is sent through the spinal cord to the cerebral cortex where pain is experienced. The experience of pain is closely related to emotional factors and the severity of the trauma After the brain has been altered of the situation, pain can be reduced so it doesn’t take up too much attention by the individual. The brain produces ENDORPHINS Endorphins Natural pain killers Ex: Encephalins Small proteins that inhibit the neurons sending the pain signal to the brain. Does this by blocking calcium ion channels This prevents calcium from entering the pre-synaptic knobs, and therefore the releasing neurotransmitters to initiate an action potential in the next neuron. Morphine and heroine mimic endorphins Videos How does your brain know where you are? https://www.ted.com/talks/neil_burgess_how_your_b rain_tells_you_where_you_are Animations Parkinsons http://www.pennmedicine.org/encyclopedia/em_Disp layAnimation.aspx?gcid=000095&ptid=17 Concussions http://www.pennmedicine.org/encyclopedia/em_Disp layAnimation.aspx?gcid=000034&ptid=17 Alzheimer’s Disease http://www.pennmedicine.org/encyclopedia/em_Disp layAnimation.aspx?gcid=000003&ptid=17