cerebral cortex

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Cerebral Cortex

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Page 1: Cerebral cortex

Cerebral Cortex

Page 2: Cerebral cortex

Layers• Most incoming

sensory signals: IV• Most output signals

leave cortex: V & VI• To brain stem and

SC: V• Fibers to thalamus:

VI• Intracortical

association functions: I,II,III

Page 3: Cerebral cortex

Functional AreasStuttering & Laughter !

Page 4: Cerebral cortex

Association Areas

• PRT Association area:

– Continous info about body spatial coordinates

– Language comprehension

– Initial processing of visual language (reading)

– Are for naming objects

Page 5: Cerebral cortex

Specific Functional Areas

Page 6: Cerebral cortex

Face Recognition

Page 7: Cerebral cortex

Wernicke’s Area

• Plays the greatest single role of any part of the cerebral cortex for the higher comprehension levels of brain function that we call intelligence

Page 8: Cerebral cortex

Cerebral Dominance?

• Dominant & nondominant hemispheres

• Categorical hemisphere • Sequential-analytic processes

– Language – Analytical reasoning

• Representational hemisphere • Visuospatial relations

– Identification of objects by their form– Recognition of faces– Recognition of musical themes

Page 9: Cerebral cortex

Lesions of Representational & Categorical Hemispheres 

• Lesions of categorical hemisphere: • Language disorders• Disturbed about their disability and often depressed

• Lesions of representational hemisphere:• No language disorders• Sometimes unconcerned and even euphoric!• Astereognosis—the inability to identify objects by feeling

them• Lesions of inferior parietal lobule cause unilateral

inattention and neglect • Inability to tell a story or make a joke

Page 10: Cerebral cortex

Language

• Language is one of the fundamental bases of human intelligence and a key part of human culture

• Areas concerned:• Wernicke's area connected via Arcuate fasciculus to

Broca's area

• 2nd language• Broca’s area concerned is different from that

associated with native language• Children learning 2 languages simultaneously have the

same Broca’s area dealing with both languages

Page 11: Cerebral cortex

• Two aspects:• Sensory

– Auditory input– Visual input

• Motor

Page 12: Cerebral cortex

Language Disorders

• Aphasias• Abnormalities of language functions that are not due

to defects of vision or hearing or to motor paralysis• Caused by lesions in categorical hemisphere

» Most common cause is embolism or thrombosis of a cerebral blood vessel

– Wernicke’s Aphasia• Global Aphasia

– Motor Aphasia– Dysarthria

• Receptive and expressive aphasia*

Page 13: Cerebral cortex

Language – Chair!

Type of Aphasia and Site of Lesion

Characteristic Naming Errors

Nonfluent (Broca’s area) "Tssair"

Fluent (Wernicke’s area) "Stool" or "choss" (neologism)

Fluent (areas 40, 41, and 42; conduction aphasia)

"Flair . . . no, swair . . . tair."

Anomic (angular gyrus) "I know what it is . . . I have a lot of them."

Page 14: Cerebral cortex

Thoughts

• A “pattern” of stimulation of many parts of the nervous system at the same time, probably involving most importantly the cerebral cortex, thalamus, limbic system, and upper reticular formation of the brain stem. (Holistic theory)

Page 15: Cerebral cortex

Memory

• Stored in brain by changing basic sensitivity of synaptic transmission b/w neurons as a result of previous neural activity

• New (facilitated) pathways - memory traces

• Once traces are established - they can be selectively activated by the thinking mind to reproduce the memories

Page 16: Cerebral cortex

Classification

• Time-wise• Short-term

» Presynaptic ++ or --

• Intermediate long-term» Reversible chemical/structural changes (pre- or

postsynaptic)

• Long-term» Actual structural changes

• Functional • Declarative• Skill

Page 17: Cerebral cortex

Classification

• Explicit or declarative memory • Associated with consciousness/awareness

• Implicit or nondeclarative memory • Does not involve awareness

Page 18: Cerebral cortex

Hippocampus

• Storage of memories

• Lesion causes: • Anterograde & • Retrograde amnesia• Cannot establish new declarative memories• Can establish skill (reflexive) memories

Page 19: Cerebral cortex

Strangeness & Familiarity

• Some parts of temporal lobes causes a change in interpretation of one's surroundings

• déjà vu phenomenon!

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