Neurology of Emotion
Disorders of Consciousness
Speech Pathways
Neurology of Hearing
Terminology
100

Structure of the brain that is involved in evocation and processing of fear and aggression. 

What is the Amygdala?

100
Client is unrousable and do not respond to purposeful stimuli but demonstrate brainstem reflexes. 

What is a Coma?

100
Voluntary motor system that controls gross motor movement, housing Betz cells. 

What is the Direct Motor Pathway/Pyramidal System?

100

Central auditory pathway ends at this area of the cerebrum, tonotopically organized. 

What is the Primary Auditory Cortex?

100

Systematic application of stimulation to a patients five sense with the purpose of increasing responsiveness to stimuli. 

What is Coma Stimulation?

200

Located superior to the corpus callosum, suspected to have a role in emotions or emotional regulation (conflict resolution)

What is the Cingulate Cortex?

200
No purposeful responses to stimuli is noted, with no brainstem reflexes, no sleep-wake cycle with flat EEG patterns. 

What is Brain Death?

200

Tract that runs from the cortex to the brainstem, that is housed entirely in the CNS, includes the direct and indirect motor pathways. 

What are Upper Motor Neurons?

200
The auditory centers of the midbrain, tonotopicaly organized, regulates our acoustic startle reflex.

What is the Inferior Colliculi?

200

The ability to understand that you have a mind and that other's have a mind and these minds think and feel differently from each other. 

What is Theory of Mind?

300

Area of the brain that processes what emotions mean; damage to this area can results in lack of emotion or too much emotion. 

What is the Prefrontal Cortex?

300

Somewhere between PVS and fully conscious state with fluctuation noted, with brainstem reflexes and sleep-wake cycle noted, with variable EEG patterns. 

What is Minimally Conscious State?

300

Caused by damage to the extrapyramidal system, with specific damage to the basal ganglia, characterized by harsh voice, monopitch, loud voice level, imprecise consonants and distorted vowels. 

What is Hypokinetic Dysarthria?

300

This area is important for the integration of auditory information, specifically time and intensity of sounds coming from both ears. 

What is the Superior Olivary Complex?

300

The retention of speech sounds long enough to process and attach meaning to them.

What is the Phonological Loop?

400

Located at the medial temporal lobes, with function in emotional processing, expressing some negative emotions, and empathy/compassion. 

What is the Insular Cortex?

400
Full awareness but no working motor or speech skills, however cognitive skills are intact. 

What is Locked-In Syndrome?

400

Disorder caused by diminished functioning in all or some of the following areas: respiration, phonation, resonance, and articulation, causing slowed, slurred and/or uncoordinated speech. 

What is Dysarthria?

400
Specific area of the brain that communicates with both Broca's and Wernicke's Area, that any damage would cause some level of auditory processing deficits. 

What is the Arcuate Fasciculus?

400

Nonmotor planning, involves taking our ideas, thoughts, or feelings and labeling it with language, otherwise known as encoding. 

What is Linguistic Planning?

500

Part of the amygdala that has both afferent and efferent connections with functions in taste and general visceral functions. 

What is the Basolateral Group?

500

Resemble comatose patient by have no sleep-wake cycle, wakefulness is present, but no core or extended consciousness. 

What is Persistent Vegetative State?

500

Controls involuntary movements involved in posture, muscle tone, and reflexes as well as coordination, or modulation or movements. 

What is the Indirect Motor Pathway/Extrapyramidal System?

500

Major component of the SOC, that specializes in higher frequency hearing from both ears. 

What is the Lateral Superior Olivary Complex?

500

Branch of the vagus nerve, that innervates all the intrinsic laryngeal muscles with the exception of the cricothyroid muscle. 

What is the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve?

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