What did Pasko Rakic said aboutt the cerebral cortex?
It is believed to be the primary location of human thought, including the ability to form ideas and feelings into words
What does the gray matter consist of?
neuronal cell bodies
dendrites
(un)myelinated axons
axon terminals
glial cells
synapses
capillaries
What does the white matter consist of?
few cell bodies
mainly long range myelinated axon tracts
How many Brodmann areas exist in the human brain
52
How many lobes exist in the human brain
4
How many layers exist in the human brain
6
How much ist excitatory in the brain and how much inhibitory?
84% excitatory and 16% inhibitory
How many nerve cells are in the grey matter?
16 billion
How many Synapses are in the human brain
15-16*10^8/mm3
How big is the surface of the cortex and how thick is it?
surface: 2500cm^2
thickness: around 2,5 mm
Sulcus
Shallow groove that surrounding a gyrus
Fissure
Large furrow dividing the brin into lobes and hemispheres
What does Christoph Koch said about the difference of the human brain?
So its not brain size, relative brain size or absolute number of of neurons that distinguish us. Perhaps our wiring has become more streamlined, our metabolism more efficient, our synapses more sophisticated
Which 2 sorts of fissure exist
longitudinal seperates the brain into left and right hemisphere
lateral seperates the temporal lobe from the frontal and parietal lobe
Which lobes are seperated from the central sulcus/fissure of Rolando?
Frontal lobe and Pariental lobe
Which functions are located in the frontal lobe?
motor functions:
conscious movement
non-motor functions:
emotional expression
problem solving
memory
Which functions are located in the pariental lobe?
sensory information integration
spatial orientation
cognition
computation
Which functions are located in the occipital lobe?
visual preception
color recognition
reading
reading comprehension
depth perception
recognition of object movement
Which functions are located in the temporal lobe?
auditory perception
speech
language comprehension
emotional responses
visaul perception
facial recognition
What are the parts of the brain stem?
Medulla oblongata, Pons und Midbrain.
How many areas per hemisphere were found out in the human connectome project
180 areas:
97 new areas
83 areas previously reported
Which functions lay in the Broca´s speech area?
language production
artivulation of words
motorical controls
gramma structure
coordination of speech movement
Which functions lay in the Wernicke´s area?
comprehension of speech
processing of speech
integration of words and sentences into contex
What is the homunculus?
The homunculus is a visual representation of the body's sensory and motor functions mapped onto the brain. It shows which areas of the somatosensory cortex and motor cortex are responsible for different parts of the body. The homunculus is depicted as a distorted human figure, with body parts like the hands and face being much larger than others, reflecting their greater cortical representation and sensitivity or motor control.
What are has the largest percentage od somatosensory cortex in a naked mule rat?
Incisors with 30,8 %
afferent und efferent
afferent = signal to the brain
efferent = signal from the brain to the muscle
Somatic sensory and Sensorimotor
Somatic sensory = Body perception to the brain (human)
Sensorimotor = integration of sensory stimuli and movement
Cortical Magnification
Cortical magnification means that the brain devotes more cortical space to processing sensory input from important or sensitive body parts, rather than distributing space evenly.
What is Nissl discoloration good for?
Visualization of soma for analyzing structure of nerve cells especially the protein production in the cell body.
cells in cortical layers and sublayers
density and morphology
What is Golgi discoloration good for?
Visualization of Axons and Dendrites of single nerve cells.
The method is particularly useful for studying the branching patterns and connections of neurons.
axons with their myelin sheats
Name the layers of the Neocortex
Molecular layer - mostly neuropil
External granular layer - stellate cells
External pyramidal layer - small pyramidal cells
Internal granular layer - stellate cells (IMPORTANT)
Internal pyramidal layer - large pyramidal cells (important for motor output/motions)
mulitform layer - multiple cell typse
What was the understanding from Mountcastle about neural organization?
Mountcastle focused on the local organization within the cortex and discovered the cortical columns as functional units of the brain.
What was the understanding from de Noe about neural organization?
Llorente de Noé, on the other hand, looked at the connected structures of the nervous system and their transmission pathways, which are essential for communication and control across various brain regions.
What happens during anesthesia?
Anesthesia causes a generalized decrease in cortical activity across all layers, leading to the loss of sensory perception, cognitive functions, and voluntary motor control.
-> close gates
Name the functions of the neocortex
1. Synaptic integration, input processing from other brain areas.
2. Cortical-cortical communication, sensory integration.
3. Higher-level processing, cortical-cortical communication, inter-hemispheric connections.
4. Sensory input processing from the thalamus (e.g., in sensory cortices).
5. Motor output, voluntary movement control, communication with subcortical structures.
6. Feedback to thalamus, modulation of sensory processing and cortical activity.
Describe the sensory to motor flow
Layer IV receives input (e.g., touch signal).
The signal is passed up to Layer II/III, where it's interpreted.
The processed signal goes down to Layer V, which sends motor commands.
Layer VI may send feedback to the thalamus, modulating further input.
What is the Hubel and Wiesel`s ice cube tray model
The "ice cube tray" model explains how the visual cortex is organized into repeating modular units (hypercolumns), each processing all orientations and both eyes’ input for a small patch of the visual field.
Vertikale Penetration -> same orientation of points
oblique.. -> different orientation
How do we see?
Light → Retina → optic nerve → Chiasma opticum → LGN → V1
Simple and complex cells from LGN Cells
Simple cells: Detect short lines in a specific orientation and position.
Complex cells: Respond to longer lines, movement, and are less position-dependent. They integrate visual information even over longer distances.
Concept of neuron repspond in vision
In vision, neurons in the visual cortex respond to specific features of the visual stimulus, such as orientation, movement, and color. Each neuron has a receptive field and fires more strongly when the stimulus matches certain characteristics (e.g., a line at a particular angle). By combining responses from many neurons, the brain constructs a detailed representation of the visual scene, helping us recognize objects and perceive motion.
Name the order of areas that work when we repeat a word
Auditory area
Wernicke`s area
Broca`s area
Motor contex
Name the order of areas that work when we read a word
Visual area
Angular Gyrus (written word is translated to internal monologue via the angular gyrus)
Motor Cortex
What is a “split brain”
The split-brain phenomenon occurs when the corpus callosum, which connects the two hemispheres of the brain, is severed, typically to treat severe epilepsy. As a result, each hemisphere functions independently, leading to a lack of communication between them. While the patient can still perceive and understand visual information, they may not be able to verbalize it if it's processed in the hemisphere responsible for non-verbal processing, typically the right hemisphere.
Information from the left face area goes into right hemisphere and vis versa. So patient can`t say what he sees on the left sight because the hemispheres are not connected and language is in the left hemisphere.
What happens if the Broca´s area is broken in a patient?
patient can´t produce speech easily
can understand other person
speeks slow and simple, converations are possible but they need lead
patient speaks a lot non sens
good mimik and motion
they often don´t know that they cannot be understood
often strugle to understand what other people say
Modulators of cortical activity
Modulators of cortical activity (such as neurotransmitters and neuromodulators) regulate how the brain processes and integrates information.
Integrated information
Integrated information is the basis of consciousness and complex mental processes, as different parts of the brain synthesize information.
Loss of cortical integration
Loss of cortical integration leads to loss of consciousness and cognitive impairment because the brain no longer functions effectively as an integrated system.
What happens if functional connectivity of frontal lobe networks are alterated?
Preceeds emergence delirium in children
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