deeply folded surface of the cerebrum; concious thought (folded to create more surface area)
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frontal lobe
coordinates movement, speech, memory, emotion, and higher cognitive skills
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occipital lobes
process visual information and recognize colors and shapes
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temporal lobe
some visual processing and interpret auditory info
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Hippocampus
curved substances below cerebral cortex; region of temporal lobe for memories
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Amygdala
within temporal lobe; integrates memory and emotion
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limbic system
includes thalamus, hypothalamus, hippocampus, and amygdala
regulate emotion and motivaton
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Thalamus
integrates sensory info and relays it to other parts of the brain
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Hypothalamus
sends hormonal signals to the rest of the body through the pituatary gland
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Forebrain
cerebral cortex and limbic system
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Midbrain
beneath the thalamus; coordinates eye movements and reflexes to sounds; inhibits unwanted body movements; coordinates sensory input and motor output
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Basal ganglia
some midbrain and some forebrain that regulates complex body movements
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Hindbrain
plays roles in glucose regulation and sleep and includes regions that control movement
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Cerebellum
second largest part of the brain, divided into two hemispheres
coordinates voluntary functions, helps new motor skills, roles in spatial and temporal functions
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Pons
under cerebellum and influences breathing and posture
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Medulla
connects brain to spinal cord and controls basic functions such as heart rate and breathing
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Brainstem
made of midbrain, pons, and medulla
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nerve tracts
nerve fibers form bundles
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smaller anterior commisure
transmits signals between the left and right temporal lobes
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neural network
group of nerve tracts connecting regions in the brain
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thalamocortical loop
connects thalamus with parts of the cortex and back
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what is an example of a thalamocortical loop?
visual cortex sending signals to the thalamus to be integrated with the other senses
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brain waves
signals produced by the thalamocortical loop that can be detected by an electroencephalograph
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which waves does your awake brain usually produce?
alpha and beta waves
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alpha waves
usually orginiate in the parietal and occipital loves when your brain is relaxed and your eyes are close (8-13 hz frequency)
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beta waves
produced by frontal and parietal regions of brainwhen processing input or focusing on a task (14-30)
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which waves are typical in sleep
delta and theta waves
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theta waves
(4-7 hz)
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delta waves
occur during deep sleep (
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Which waves are stronger out of delta, theta, alpha, and beta?
Alpha and delta are strong, beta and theta are weaker
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spinal tracts
chains of neurons that pass signals through the brainstem and spinal cord
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basal ganglia
takes info from cortical that allow movement and produce signals to the cortexto enable or inhibit movement
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What do the networks that loop the hippocampus into the sensory cortex do?
determine if environmental signals are familiar or new
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What do the networks that link the hippocampus to the thalamus and hypothalamus?
allow memory to influence concious behavior as well as unconcious physiological responses
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What are reflex loops?
circuits allowing action before thoughts- the action is controlled by info that goes in and out the spinal cord and never to the cortex
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neural circuts
interconnected neurons that turn entering signals into output patterns that can be sent to other parts of the brain
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Where can one find a lot of neural circuits and how are they arranged?
The cerebral cortex; in a stack of distinct layers
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What are excitatory neurons?
they excite the next cell into firing; most common
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What is the most common type of excitatory neuron in the cerebral cortex?
pyramidal cells; cone shapes cell body - each has two sets of dendrites and a multibranched axon
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inhibitory neurons
prevent other neurons from firing and regulate acitivity of a circuit
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feed-foward inhibitory circuit
inhibitory interneurons connect neighboring neural circuits in a way that the excitatory cells in one column send inhibitory signals to adjacent columns, reducing activity
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feedback inhibiton
send signals to downstream excitatory neighbors and to interneurons that reach back and inhibit layers of the same circuit
form a network in the brain that regulates ion concentrations, provide them with nutrients, mop up extra neurotransmitter, and regulate formation of new connections between neurons
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What do microglia do?
function mainly as phagocytes, but can also regulate formation of new neuronal connections
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What do ependymal cells do?
make the cerebrospinal fluid
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What do oligodendrocytes do?
form myelin sheaths
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Kinesins
work the protein down the axon through microtubules
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What are the two types of receptors?
ionotropic and metabotropic
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ionotropic receptors
neurotransmitter binds to an ion channel that changes shape and widens for ions
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metabotropic receptors
receptors connected by a cascade triggered by neurotransmitter on receptor
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Reuptake
process by which neurotransmitters are broken down or reabsorbed by the axon terminal
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glutamate
most common excitatory neurotransmitter that can bind to AMPA (fast and brief) and NMDA (slow) receptors
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GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
most common inhibitory neurotransmitter; ionotropic GABA lets chloride enter the cell and metabotropic releases potassium ions
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Neuromodulators
suppress neurotransmitter release
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Prostaglandins
lipids that change the brain's response to pain and inflammation