anatomy and physiology chapter 11-13
glutamate
A major excitatory neurotransmitter; involved in memory
propriceptors
Respond to skeletal muscles, tendons joints and ligaments
grey matter
The portions of the central nervous system that are abundant in cell bodies of neurons rather than axons. Unmyelinated.
diencephalon is composed of
thalamus, hypothalamus, epithalamus
cerebral cortex
"executive suite" of brain - site of the conscious mind - superficial layer of gray matter - composed of neuron cell bodies dentrites
endorphins
"morphine within"--natural, opiatelike neurotransmitters linked to pain control and to pleasure.
premotor cortex
-helps plan movements -controls learned, repetitious, or patterned motor skills -coordinates simultaneous or sequential actions -controls voluntary actions that depend on sensory feedback
primary olfactory cortex
-located within temporal lobe -provides conscious awareness of smells
somatosensory association cortex
-posterior to primary somatosensory cortex -integrates sensory input from primary somatosensory cortex for understanding of object -determines size, texture, and relationship of parts of objects being felt
lateral ventricle
A complexly shaped lateral portion of the ventricular system within each hemisphere of the brain.
stroke
A sudden attack of weakness or paralysis that occurs when blood flow to an area of the brain is interrupted
Prosencephalon
The embryonic portion of the brain that becomes the forebrain.
third ventricle
The midline ventricle that conducts cerebrospinal fluid from the lateral ventricles to the fourth ventricle.
primary visual cortex
The region of the cerebral cortex that receives information directly from the visual system; located in the occipital lobe
GABA
a major inhibitory neurotransmitter
primary visual cortex damage
blind
sensory
conscious awareness of sensation
cortex 4
conscious behavior involves the entire cortex in one way or another
central nervous system
consists of the brain and spinal cord
motor
control voluntary movement
frontal eye field
controls voluntary eye movements
serotonin
depression, bi polar (LSD, alcohol, ecstasy)
cortex 2
each hemisphere is concerned with contralateral (opposite) side of the body
dopamine
excitement, achievement, good food, good sex (cocaine, alcohol)
ventricles
fluid filled chambers that are continuous to one another and to central canal of spinal cord
spatial discrimination
identification of body region being stimulated
association
integrate diverse information
primary auditory cortex
interprets information from the inner ear as pitch loudness and location - superior margin of temporal lobes
pyramidal cell
large neurons that allow conscious control of precise, skilled, skeletal muscle movement
cortex 3
lateralization (specialization) of cortical function can occur in only one hemisphere
cerebral hemispheres
Form the superior part of the brain, and are characterized by ridges and groves called gyri and sulci.
gustatory cortex
In insula just deep to temporal lobe Involved in perception of taste
ependymal cells
line cavities of the brain and spinal cord, circulate cerebrospinal fluid
primary somatosensory cortex
located in postcentral gyro of parietal love
Primary (somatic) motor cortex
located in precentral gyros of frontal lobe (skeletal muscle movement, multipolar nueron)
visceral sensory area
Posterior to gustatory cortex - Conscious perception of visceral sensations, such as upset stomach or full bladder
cortex 1
motor area, sensory, association
white matter
myelinated 90%
Acetylcholine
nictotine
left side of the primary motor cortex
paralysis
vestibular cortex
posterior part of the insula and adjacent parietal cortex - responsible for conscious awareness of balance (position of head in space)
brocas's area
present in one hemisphere left - muscles for speaking
multimodal association area
receive input from multiple senses and integrate this into an overall perception of our surroundings
calcarine sulcus
separates the occipital lobe into superior and inferior halves
Myelination
signals go fast
auditory association area
stores memories of sounds and permits perception of sounds - location posterior to primary auditory cortex
damage to primary motor cortex
stroke
visual association area
surrounds the primary visual cortex and covers much of the occipital lobe; uses past visual experiences to interpret visual stimuli (color, form, and movement); complex processing involves entire posterior half of the hemisphere
Rhombencephalon
the embryonic portion of the brain that becomes the hindbrain
Mesencephalon
the midbrain; a region of the brain that surrounds the cerebral aqueduct; includes the tectum and the tegmentum
fourth ventricle
the ventricle located between the cerebellum and the dorsal pons, in the center of the metencephalon