Neurons
Brain Structures
Limbic System
Cortex
Scenarios
100

What is the role of Dentrites? 

To receive information

100

This controls heartrate and breathing

Medulla

100

This is linked to emotion, fear, and aggression

Amygdala

100

How many areas is the cortex divided into?

4

100

A student can’t make new memories after a bike accident.

Hippocampus

200

What is the role of the synapse?

To send information
200

This controls sleep and coordinates movement

pons

200

This directs eating, drinking, body temperature and is linked to emotion and reward

Hypothalamus

200

This is involved with personality, emotions, and motor behaviors

Frontal Lobe

200

A driver has trouble coordinating movements and keeps knocking things over.

Cerebellum

300

This covers the axon

Mylien Sheath
300

This helps control arousal and filters incoming sensory stimuli

Reticular Formation

300

This helps process for storing explicit memories of facts and events

Hippocampus

300

This is involved with perception and sensory experiences

Parietal Lobe

300

A girl can’t see even though her eyes are fine.

Occipital lobe

400

What is the role of the nucleus?

Holds DNA/Information

400

This is the relay station for incoming and outgoing sensory information

Thalamus

400

This is the term for when your body thinks it is a life-or-death situation for an everyday issue

Amygdala Hijacking 

400

This is involved with processing visual information

Occipital Lobe

400

A man shows no fear, even in clearly dangerous situations

Amygdala

500

What do the neurons use to send information between each other? 

Neurotransmitters

500

This controls processing sensory input, coordinating movement and balance, nonverbal learning, and memory

Cerebellum

500

People who lose or injure this part of the brain lose their ability to form new memories

Hippocampus

500

This is involved with hearing and speaking 

Temporal Lobe

500

A student becomes impulsive and struggles to control emotions or make decisions after a skateboard crash.

Frontal Lobe

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