Neuroanatomy (Ch 1+)
Ion Channels (Ch 4)
The Eye (Ch 11)
Central Visual Pathways (Ch 12)
The Motor System: Spinal Cord (Ch 16)
The Motor System: Cortex (Ch 17)
Sensory Motor Integration (Ch 20)
Cognitive Function (Ch 27)
Speech and Language (Ch 33)
100

The 4 lobes of the cerebral cortex

What are the Frontal, Parietal, Occipital and Temporal Lobes?


100

A channel that becomes inactive during the overshoot phase of the action potential

What is a Navoltage-gated channel?

100

A photoreceptor that has high spatial acuity 

What is a cone?

100

About 60% of fibers cross at this key location.

What is the optic chiasm?

100

These neurons innervate skeletal muscles fibres

What are lower (alpha) motor neurons?

100

Upper motor neurons are found in these two locations

What is the cortex and brainstem?

100

This type of eye movement is used to track moving objects.

What are smooth pursuit eye movements?
100

A disorder known as face blindness

What is prosopagnosia?

100

An area associated with the ability to produce language efficiently.

What is Broca's area?

200

To view the brain from above

What is dorsal?

200

The slow opening of K+ voltage-gated channels during depolarisation allows for this type of current

What is a late outward current?

200

When light rays are focused in front of the retina

What is Myopia?

200

This provides the basis for stereopsis?

What are binocular disparity cues?

200

The recruitment of motor units in size order based on the amount of force needed.

What is the size principle?

200

Comprised of a motor neuron and the muscle fibres it innervates.

What is a motor unit?

200

When the eye is adducted, which muscle would be primarily responsible for elevating the eye in this position

What is the inferior oblique?

200

A region of the frontal lobe that mediates decision making and planning 

What is the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex?

200

The emotional valence of speech, made using intensity, pitch, rhythm etc.

What is prosody?

300

The cell that supports the activity of neurons but do not themselves participate in electrical signaling

What is a Glial Cell?

300

A recording technique that is optimal for studying how channel activity is influenced by extracellular chemical signals

What is outside-out recording?

300

The opposite of myopia (short-sighted).

What is hyperopia?

300

A multisensory midbrain structure that coordinates head & eye movements towards targets

What is the Superior colliculus?

300

When one muscles contracts, the other muscle relaxes.

What are antagonistic muscle pairs?

300

Motor maps over-represent body parts responsible for finer movements (relative to larger body parts responsible for coarser movements)

What is cortical magnification?

300

Neurons responsible for generating directional oculomotor commands

What are Local Circuit Neurons?

300

These 2 layers of the cerebral cortex primarily has corticocortical connections?

What are layers 2 and 3?

300

Split brain patients have this brain structure severed as a treatment for medically intractable epileptic seizures.

What is the corpus callosum?

400

Structural feature separating the frontal and parietal lobes.

What is the central sulcus?

400

The structure responsible for ion selectivity in K+ channels.

What is the selectivity filter?

400

A type of bipolar cell that hyperpolarises when light is shone on the centre of its receptive field

What is an OFF-centre bipolar cell?

400

The primary visual cortex has this type of laminar organisation?

What is columnar?

400

Sherrington coined this term to describe the relationship between a single alpha motor neuron and all the muscle fibres it innervates.

 What is a motor unit?

400

The reticular formation is part of this structure.

What is the brainstem?

400

These two areas project to the gaze centers and are especially important for generating saccades to visual targets.

What are the superior colliculus and the frontal eye fields (FEF)?

400

Neurons whose firing rates are modulated by attention can be found in this part of the brain.

What is the parietal cortex?

400

Tactile object recognition in split-brain patients confirmed this feature of language control.

What is lateralisation?

500

The lobe most strongly associated with recognising/identifying objects.

What is the temporal lobe?

500

The number of subunits that are assembled together to form a bacterial K+ channel.

What is four?

500

This is why the photoreceptor sheet is located at the back rather than the front of the eye?

What is to permit the efficient recycling of the outer segments of photoreceptors?

500

Symptom of damage to the Edinger-Westphal nucleus in the brainstem.

What is no consensual eye response? (i.e. one eye's pupil constricts in light, but not the other)

500

Percentage of pyramidal tract fibres that decussate to form the lateral corticospinal tract.

What is 90%?

500

The name for the collective activity of a large number of upper motor neurons in the primary motor cortex, which reliably predicts the upcoming reaching direction.

What is a neuronal population vector?

500

This encodes the amplitude of saccadic eye movements.

What is the duration of activity in the lower motor neurons of the oculomotor nuclei?

500

The name of one of the most famous early cases of behavioural deficits from frontal lobe damage that was caused by a tamping iron which entered his skull because of an explosion at work.

Phineas Gage

500

These are the cytoarchitectonic areas defined by Brodmann that are now associated with Broca's and Wernicke's areas, respectively. 

What are Brodmann areas 44 and 45 for Broca's, and 22 for Wernicke's?

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