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The Brain

The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

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Page 1: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The Brain

Page 2: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI
Page 3: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Ways we Study the Brain

• Accidents• Lesions• EEG• CAT Scan• PET Scan• MRI• Functional MRI

Page 4: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Accidents

Phineas Gage Story• Personality

changed after the accident.

What this this tell us?• That different part

of the brain control different aspects of who we are.

Page 5: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Lesions

• Purposeful removal or destruction of some part of the brain.

• Frontal Lobotomy

Page 6: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Electroencephalogram

• EEG• Detects brain

waves through their electrical output.

• Used mainly in sleep research.

Page 7: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Computerized Axial Tomography

• CAT Scan• 3D X-Ray of

the brain.• Good for tumor

locating, but tells us nothing about function.

Page 8: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

• MRI• More detailed picture

of brain using magnetic field to knock electrons off axis.

• Takes many still pictures and turns images into a movie like production.

• Does not study function!

http://www.imrser.org/PatientVideo.html

Page 9: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Positron Emission Tomography• PET Scan

• Measures how much of a chemical the brain is using (usually glucose consumption).

• Good for studying function.

Page 10: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI
Page 11: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Functional MRI• Combination of PET and MRI• fMRI is good for function, hence the f.

Page 12: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

f MRI example

• Amygdala activation

• Primary Visual

Cortex activation

Page 13: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI
Page 14: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• Dr. Jones, a brain researcher, is investigating the connection between certain environmental stimuli and brain processes. Which types of brain scans is she most likely to use?

• A. MRI and CAT

• B. CAT and EKG

• C. PET and fMRI

• D. EKG and CAT

• E. lesioning and MRI

The answer was C. The CAT and the MRI give insight into brain structure, not function.

Page 15: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Brain Structures

1. Hindbrain (brain stem)

2. Midbrain3. Forebrain

Cerebral Cortex is part of forebrain

Page 16: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The brain was builtlike a house, bottomto top.The hindbrain controlsbasic functions like breathing.The forebrain is the most complex

Page 17: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

HindbrainMedulla, Pons,

Cerebellum• Structures on top of our spinal cord.• Controls basic biological structures.

• All animals have hindbrains!

.

Page 18: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Medulla Oblongata

• Located just above the spinal cord.

Involved in control of

•blood pressure•heart rate•breathing.

(basic stuff!)

Page 19: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Pons• Located just

above the medulla.

• Connects hindbrain with midbrain and forebrain.

• Involved in facial expressions. (Pons = yawns)

Page 20: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Cerebellum

• Bottom rear of the brain.

• Means “little brain”

• Coordinates fine muscle movements and balance.

Page 21: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Midbrain• Coordinates simple

movements with sensory information.

• Most important structure in Midbrain is the Reticular Formation: controls arousal and ability to focus our attention.

If Destroyed

Page 22: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Forebrain• Largest part of

the brain.

• Made up of the Thalamus, Limbic System and Cerebral Cortex.

Page 23: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The Limbic System deals with memory and

emotions

Page 24: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Thalamus• Switchboard “relay

station” of the brain.

• Receives sensory signals from the spinal cord and sends them to other parts of the forebrain.

• Every sense except smell.

Page 25: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Hypothalamus• Maybe most important

structure in the brain.Controls and regulates the

4 F’sFightingFleeingFeedingFlirting (Mating

Controls the endocrine system)

The most powerful structure in the brain.

Page 26: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Rat with an Implanted Electrode in pleasure

center of Hypothalamus

Page 27: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The Ventromedial Nuclei gives a

signal when to stop eating. The lateral hypothalamus tell your body you’re

full.

Page 28: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Hippocampus

• Involved in the processing and storage of memories.

• Damage can cause amnesia

Page 29: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Amygdala

• Involved in telling your body to produce norepinephrine (adrenaline)

• More involved in volatile emotions like anger and fear The emotion of anger

has not changed much throughout evolution.

Page 30: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The hindbrain consists of the:

• A. endocrine stystem and the limbic system.

• B. reticular formation

• C. thalamus, hypothalamus, and cerebrum

• D. cerebellum, the medulla, and the pons

Page 31: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The thalamus can be characterized as

• A. a regulatory mechanism

• B. the consciousness switch of the brain

• C. a relay system

• D. a bridge between the 2 cerebral hemispheres

Page 32: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The Cerebral Cortex

• Made up of densely packed neurons we call “gray matter”

• Wrinkles are called fissures.

• If you lay brain out it would be as big as a large pizza.

• It’s divided into 2 hemispheres and 4 lobes!

Page 33: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The Cerebral Cortex is made up of four Lobes.

Page 34: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

What are Frontal Lobes?• Abstract thought,

emotional control and planning/reasoning.

• Contains Motor Cortex• Broca’s area.• Lobotomies damage

this.

Page 35: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

What is the motor cortex?• Part of the brain in the frontal lobe that tells

my body how to move (like typing this).

Page 36: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

What is the sensory cortex?It’s the part that deals with touch sensations. It’sIn the parietal lobe.

Page 37: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

What are Motor and Sensory Cortexes?

The wires are switched! Right controls left!The motor cortex is in which lobe?

Page 38: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI
Page 39: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

A visual representation of how much space your brain needs to operate parts of your body. Notice how big the face and hands are. How small everything else is!

Page 40: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Motor strip and homunculus Motor strip

Page 41: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Parietal Lobes• Contain Sensory

Cortex: receives incoming touch sensations from rest of the body.

• Most of the Parietal Lobes are made up of Association Areas.

Page 42: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Motor and Sensory Cortexes

Page 43: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Occipital Lobes

• Think “optical”.• Contains Visual

Cortex: interprets messages from our eyes into images we can understand.

Page 44: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Temporal Lobes• Process sound

sensed by our ears.• Interpreted in

Auditory Cortex.• Contains Wernike's

Area: interprets written and spoken speech.

• Wernike's Aphasia: unable to understand language: the syntax and grammar jumbled.

Page 45: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• What is the temporal lobe? “near the temples” it contains Wernike’s area Deals with your hearing.

• What is Wernike’s area? Brain part in temporal lobe – deals with comprehension of language.

• What is Wernike’s aphasia? Inability to understand language.

Page 46: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• Broca’s area – production of speech think (boca) (left side of the frontal lobe).

• Think boca = broca

• Wernicke’s area deals with comprehension of language. (temporal lobe of left hemisphere)

Which side of brain are we seeing?

Page 47: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Specialization and Integration in Language

Page 48: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

48

•The brain is sculpted by our genes but also by our experiences.

•Plasticity :The ability for our brains to form new connections after the neurons are damaged.•The younger you are, the more plastic your brain is.

.

The Brain’s Plasticity

Page 49: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Hemispheres

Divided into to hemispheres.

In general,Left Hemisphere:

logic and sequential tasks. Language!

Right Hemisphere: spatial and creative tasks. Reading emotions.

Page 50: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The ______ lobe is to hearing as the occipital lobe is to vision

• A. frontal

• B. temporal

• C. parietal

• D. cerebellar

Page 51: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• Blindness could result from damage to which cortex and lobe of the brain?

• A. visual cortex in the frontal lobe

• B. visual cortex in the temporal lobe

• C. sensory cortex in the parietal lobe

• D. visual cortex in the occipital lobe

• E. cerebral cortex in the occipital lobe

Page 52: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Brain Activity when Hearing, Seeing, and Speaking Words

Page 53: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• In most people, which one of the following is a specific function of the left hemisphere that is typically not controlled by the right hemisphere?

• A. producing speech

• B. control of the left hand

• C. spatial reasoning

• D. hypothesis testing

• E. abstract reasoning

Page 54: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• When brain researchers refer to brain plasticity, they are talking about

• A. the brain’s ability to quickly regrow damaged neurons

• B. the surface texture and appearance caused by the layer known as the cerebral cortex

• C. the brain’s versatility caused by the millions of neural connections

• D. our adaptability to different problems ranging from survival needs to abstract reasoning

• E. new connections forming in the brain to take over for damaged sections

Page 55: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

The Corpus CallosumDivides the 2 hemispheres.Divides the left from right sides.

The corpus callosumis cut to prevent seizuresfrom spreading to the otherside of the brain.

Page 56: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Split Brain Patients

Those who, due to epilepsy, have their corpus callosum cut or removed.

Page 57: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Testing the Divided Brain

Page 58: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Experiment #1 Split-brain patients

• Experimenter shows fork to left hemisphere (presents to the right side)

• Participant is asked what he saw…• He states “fork”• Experimenter shows spoon to right hemisphere• Participant is asked what he saw• Response: “I don’t know”• Participant is asked to reach in a bag with left hand

(right hemisphere) to retrieve what he saw• He pulls out a spoon…explain?

Page 59: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

Other weird issues with split-brain

• A split-brain patient was asked what he wanted to do with his life…– Left hemisphere wrote: architect– Right hemisphere wrote: race car driver

• Suicide case study– Left hand (right hemisphere) kept trying to strangle

herself– Left hemisphere was unaware of why this was happening

and had to defend herself– Tumor was discovered on her corpus collosum

Page 60: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• Case study of lesioned corpus collosum– Right hand (left hemisphere) chose conservative

clothes– Left hand (right hemisphere) would unbutton

shirts without the left hemisphere’s awareness

• Implication: Are there two of us?

Page 61: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• "The great pleasure and feeling in my right brain is more than my left brain can find the words to tell you."

• Roger Sperry

Page 62: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

On the next slide, say the COLOR of the word without reading the word.

Page 63: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI
Page 64: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• Split brain patients are unable to:• A. coordinate movements between their

major and minor muscle groups• B. speak about information received

exclusively in their right hemisphere• C. speak about information received

exclusively in their left hemisphere• D. solve abstract problems involving

integrating logical (left hemisphere) and spatial (right hemisphere) information

• E. speak about information received exclusively through their left ear, left eye, or left side of their bodies

Page 65: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

• The scientist who won a Nobel Prize for his work with split brain patients is

• A. Walter Cannon

• B. Paul Broca

• C. Roger Sperry

• D. James Olds

• E. Cheech Marin

Page 66: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

A Tour Through The Brain: Split-Brain Research

• Severing the corpus callosum provides data regarding the functions of the brain’s two hemispheres.

Page 67: The Brain. Ways we Study the Brain Accidents Lesions EEG CAT Scan PET Scan MRI Functional MRI

A Tour Through The Brain: Lateralization

• The left and right hemispheres of the

brain each specialize

in particular operations.