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698360
The Vertebrate Brain
Description
BSc degree Neurobiology (The Nervous System) Mind Map on The Vertebrate Brain, created by yolajoy on 31/03/2014.
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neurobiology
the nervous system
neurobiology
the nervous system
bsc degree
Mind Map by
yolajoy
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
yolajoy
over 10 years ago
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Resource summary
The Vertebrate Brain
is regionally specialised
Forebrain
Diencephalon
Hypothalamus
regulates homeostasis and basic survival behaviors such as
feeding
fighting
fleeing
reproducing
regulates the biological clock
regulates cicardian rhythms such as the sleep/wake cycle
most mammals have a pair of suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) in the hypothalamus which act as a biological clock
Biological clocks generally require external cues to remain synchronised with environmental cycles
Thalamus
the main input centre for sensory information to the cerebrum
the main output centre for motor information leaving the cerebrum
Epithalamus
pineal gland
secretes melatonin
Cerebrum/telencephalon
the structure which varies most across species
has two hemispheres the right and the left
each hemisphere consists of a cerebral cortex (grey matter) overlaying white matter and basal nuclei
in humans the cerebral cortex is the largest and most complex part of the brain
it controls voluntary movement and cognitive functions
the basal nuclei are important centres for planning and learning movement sequences
diseases of the basal ganlia include
Parkinson's
Huntington's
Tourette syndrome
lateralisation of cortical function
corpus callosum
a thick band of axons provides communication between the right and left hemispheres
split brain occurs if corpus callosum is removed
left hemisphere
is more adept at language, maths, logic and processing of serial sequences
right hemisphere
is stronger at pattern recognition, nonverbal thinking and emotional processing
the differences in hemisphere function are called lateralisation
the right half of the cerebral cortex controls the left side fo the body and vice versa
each side of the cerebral cortex has four lobes:
frontal
temporal
occipital
parietal
each lobe contains primary sensory areas and association areas where information is integrated
The Brainstem
Hindbrain
pons
regulates the breathing centres in the meulla
medulla oblongata
contains centres that control several functions including
breathing
cardiovascular activity
swallowing
vomiting
digestion
cerebellum
is important for
movement coordination
balance
error checking during motor, perceptual and cognitive functions
is involved in learning and remembering motor skills
part of hind brain but not of Brainstem
Midbrain
contains centres for receipt and integration of sensory information
coordinates and conducts information between brain centres
Arousal and sleep
controled by both the cerebrum and the brainstem
in the core of the brainstem there is a network of neurons called the reticular formation
this regulates the amount and type of information that reaches the cerebral cortex and affects alertness
the hormone melatonin is released by the pineal gland
this plays a role in the sleep cycles of birds and mammals
sleep is essential and may play and role in the consolidation of learning and memory
dolphins sleep with one brain hemisphere at a time
this means they are able to swim while they're "asleep"
the limbic system
where emotions are generated and experienced
this takes place in other parts of the brain as well including various sensory areas
is a ring of structures around the brainstem inculding
the amygdala
located in the temporal lobe
helps store an emotional experience as an emotional memory
the hippocampus
parts of the thalamus
the outermost layer of the cerebral cortex has a different arrangement in bird and mammals
in mammals the cerebral cortex has a convoluted surface called the neo cortex
this was previously thought to be required for cognition
cognition is the perception and reasoning that form knowledge
however it has recently been shown that birds also demonstrate cognition even though they do not have a neocortex
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