Cortex & Connections
Pathway:
Primary sensory cortex, where 3rd order neurons get to the cortex. Rough idea of what it might me (quality) →
Secondary sensory cortex, have more recognition of what it is, more discrete recognition →
Association Cortex, where we decide how we feel about the stimulus & decide what we should do about it →
Motor planning area, know we know what we want to do so this is where we create the plan →
Primary Motor Cortex, where the plan is executed
Primary Somatosensory Cortex
receives information from tactile and proprioceptive receptors (3 neuron pathway)
1st = peripheral afferent/dorsal column neuron
2nd = medial lemniscus neuron (aka dorsal column)
3rd = thalamocortical neuron
( visual and auditory have their own regions ***)
Helps in our awareness of our environment…Discriminative touch & proprioception
awareness through somatosensation
able to determine location of stimulus
understand shape, size and texture of a structure
Primary Cortices
Primary Auditory Cortices (PAC): receives info from the ears by a pathway that synapses at the inferior colliculus and medial geniculate body
in this case both cortices receive input from both ears, so damage to one side will not affect just one side (there are reinforcements)
Primary Vestibular Cortices (PVC): receives information regarding head movement and position relative to gravity, info goes to both sides
Primary Visual Cortex: information travels from the retina (cranial nerve 2) to the thalamus the to the primary visual cortex
( remember all sensory must go to the the thalamus first prior to the cortex***)
Association Areas
Dorsolateral Prefrontal (decision making & motor)
Parietotemporal (special senses & maintaining equilibrium)
Ventral & Medial Dorsal Prefrontal
…these are all still linked to the function of the region
These association play a big role in our personality and how we interpret our environment. Regions affect…
Personality
Interpretation of Sensation (what it is and how we feel)
Processing of Memory
Emotions
Intelligence
Dorsolateral Prefrontal
function = self-awareness & executive function
Executive function includes…
decide a goal
how to plan & how to execute the plan
Monitoring execution of the plan
Parietotemporal
cognitive intelligence, including language, written and auditory communication
problem solving
comprehension of communication
understanding spatial relationships
( people who are functionally illiterate they still utilize this region to understand other cues, reading is a learned skill)
Ventral & Medial Dorsal Prefrontal
close to the cingulate gyrus ( close to the limbic system) so it works with the limbic system
impulse control
personality
reactions to surroundings
SUMMARY of the 3 Association Areas
Dorsolateral Prefrontal Association Area: goal-oriented behavior & self awareness
Parietotemporal Association Area: sensory integration, problem solving, understanding language and spacial relationships
Ventral & Medial Dorsal Prefrontal Association: emotion, motivation & personality
Working Memory (short term: what’s happening in the next 5 mins)
Maintains goal-relevant information (for a short time), matching memory to new experiences
Essential for language, problem-solving, mental navigation and reasoning
Multitasking requires working memory and is central to cognition
The prefrontal cortex & the parietotemporal association cortex maintain, manipulate and update info in working memory…whats coming in vs what you already know (makes the connection)
Communication
Wernicke’s Area: comprehension of spoken language & interprets symbols
understanding the words
even working in individuals who can’t read etc…
So you know what someone say and now what do you say back..
Broca’a Area: provides instructions for language output
planning the movements (activates muscles) to produce speech
“ in order to blurt anything out”
correlates words when writing (the “inner voice to write”)
these are bi-lateral, but weighted differently
If the cortex is not working correctly…Terms to Know
Apraxia: loss of task performance, w/out loss of movement
you’ll have all the ROM and strength but unable to understand how to put it together/utilize
damage will keep you from making a good clear plan
Agnosia: loss of the sensation
Mainly seen as loss of touch, but can affect any of the 5 senses
Receptive (Wernicke’s) aphasia: cannot really understand spoken language (may be able to hear) and all other language is impacted…patients will make up words, substitute wrong words, disordered syntax (all with realizing what they’re truly saying)
cannot understand what they are hearing or what the words are
they don’t understand what they themselves are saying (aka produces word salad)
Expressive Aphasia (Broca): hallmark is the ability to understand written and verbal language but unable to generate the appropriate words…patients are aware of the nonsense articulations
cannot express themselves
these individuals are frustrated that they can’t match what they want to say versus what is actually said
when working with these patients, you must communicate with very direct/straight forward questions (yes/no)
Spatial Perception
(damage to the dorsolateral prefrontal association area)
Body: mental representation of how the body is anatomically arranged
Body in relation to its surroundings: enables individuals to locate objects in space & navigate accurately
External world: ability to plan a route from point A to point B
Symptoms of Right Parietal Lobe Lesions
Hemineglect Syndrome (seen post stroke)
ignores anything to the left ( visual field)
happens after right side lesions
loss of recognition of spatial relations
Eyes are working fine the brain just does not process the input coming in from that one side
These patients will draw a clock with all the numbers to the right, only read what is on the left side…no general understanding of layouts
Pathway:
Primary sensory cortex, where 3rd order neurons get to the cortex. Rough idea of what it might me (quality) →
Secondary sensory cortex, have more recognition of what it is, more discrete recognition →
Association Cortex, where we decide how we feel about the stimulus & decide what we should do about it →
Motor planning area, know we know what we want to do so this is where we create the plan →
Primary Motor Cortex, where the plan is executed
Primary Somatosensory Cortex
receives information from tactile and proprioceptive receptors (3 neuron pathway)
1st = peripheral afferent/dorsal column neuron
2nd = medial lemniscus neuron (aka dorsal column)
3rd = thalamocortical neuron
( visual and auditory have their own regions ***)
Helps in our awareness of our environment…Discriminative touch & proprioception
awareness through somatosensation
able to determine location of stimulus
understand shape, size and texture of a structure
Primary Cortices
Primary Auditory Cortices (PAC): receives info from the ears by a pathway that synapses at the inferior colliculus and medial geniculate body
in this case both cortices receive input from both ears, so damage to one side will not affect just one side (there are reinforcements)
Primary Vestibular Cortices (PVC): receives information regarding head movement and position relative to gravity, info goes to both sides
Primary Visual Cortex: information travels from the retina (cranial nerve 2) to the thalamus the to the primary visual cortex
( remember all sensory must go to the the thalamus first prior to the cortex***)
Association Areas
Dorsolateral Prefrontal (decision making & motor)
Parietotemporal (special senses & maintaining equilibrium)
Ventral & Medial Dorsal Prefrontal
…these are all still linked to the function of the region
These association play a big role in our personality and how we interpret our environment. Regions affect…
Personality
Interpretation of Sensation (what it is and how we feel)
Processing of Memory
Emotions
Intelligence
Dorsolateral Prefrontal
function = self-awareness & executive function
Executive function includes…
decide a goal
how to plan & how to execute the plan
Monitoring execution of the plan
Parietotemporal
cognitive intelligence, including language, written and auditory communication
problem solving
comprehension of communication
understanding spatial relationships
( people who are functionally illiterate they still utilize this region to understand other cues, reading is a learned skill)
Ventral & Medial Dorsal Prefrontal
close to the cingulate gyrus ( close to the limbic system) so it works with the limbic system
impulse control
personality
reactions to surroundings
SUMMARY of the 3 Association Areas
Dorsolateral Prefrontal Association Area: goal-oriented behavior & self awareness
Parietotemporal Association Area: sensory integration, problem solving, understanding language and spacial relationships
Ventral & Medial Dorsal Prefrontal Association: emotion, motivation & personality
Working Memory (short term: what’s happening in the next 5 mins)
Maintains goal-relevant information (for a short time), matching memory to new experiences
Essential for language, problem-solving, mental navigation and reasoning
Multitasking requires working memory and is central to cognition
The prefrontal cortex & the parietotemporal association cortex maintain, manipulate and update info in working memory…whats coming in vs what you already know (makes the connection)
Communication
Wernicke’s Area: comprehension of spoken language & interprets symbols
understanding the words
even working in individuals who can’t read etc…
So you know what someone say and now what do you say back..
Broca’a Area: provides instructions for language output
planning the movements (activates muscles) to produce speech
“ in order to blurt anything out”
correlates words when writing (the “inner voice to write”)
these are bi-lateral, but weighted differently
If the cortex is not working correctly…Terms to Know
Apraxia: loss of task performance, w/out loss of movement
you’ll have all the ROM and strength but unable to understand how to put it together/utilize
damage will keep you from making a good clear plan
Agnosia: loss of the sensation
Mainly seen as loss of touch, but can affect any of the 5 senses
Receptive (Wernicke’s) aphasia: cannot really understand spoken language (may be able to hear) and all other language is impacted…patients will make up words, substitute wrong words, disordered syntax (all with realizing what they’re truly saying)
cannot understand what they are hearing or what the words are
they don’t understand what they themselves are saying (aka produces word salad)
Expressive Aphasia (Broca): hallmark is the ability to understand written and verbal language but unable to generate the appropriate words…patients are aware of the nonsense articulations
cannot express themselves
these individuals are frustrated that they can’t match what they want to say versus what is actually said
when working with these patients, you must communicate with very direct/straight forward questions (yes/no)
Spatial Perception
(damage to the dorsolateral prefrontal association area)
Body: mental representation of how the body is anatomically arranged
Body in relation to its surroundings: enables individuals to locate objects in space & navigate accurately
External world: ability to plan a route from point A to point B
Symptoms of Right Parietal Lobe Lesions
Hemineglect Syndrome (seen post stroke)
ignores anything to the left ( visual field)
happens after right side lesions
loss of recognition of spatial relations
Eyes are working fine the brain just does not process the input coming in from that one side
These patients will draw a clock with all the numbers to the right, only read what is on the left side…no general understanding of layouts