Landmarks
Sensory
Inferior Parietal Lobule
Temporal
Potpourri
100

This feature separates the parietal lobe from the occipital lobe

Parieto-occipital Notch

100
BAs 5 and 7 compose this area involved in visuospatial processing and visuospatial memory

Secondary Somatosensory Cortex

100

BA 40

Supramarginal Gyrus

100
The BA number associated with Wernicke's Area

22

100

Number knowledge, arithmetic, and calculation skills are thought to be housed in this sulcus

Intraparietal

200

This feature separates the temporal lobe from the occipital lobe

Preoccipital Notch

200

An insult to the Secondary Somatosensory Cortex could result in this type of agnosia

Tactile
200

BA 39

Angular Gyrus

200

The primary site of auditory reception in the brain

Heschl's gyrus (41,42)

200

This area at the anterior tip of the temporal lobe is frequently damaged in traumatic brain injury

Temporal Pole (BA 38)

300

The gyrus just posterior to the central sulcus

Post-Central Gyrus

300

This functional area is the sensory counterpart to the motor strip

Primary Sensory Cortex 

300

The supramarginal gyrus is thought to play a major role in this early pre-literacy skill

Phonological Awareness

300
Describe the s/s of Wernicke's aphasia

Fluent but empty speech, poor auditory comprehension, little insight, poor repetition

300

Part of the inferior aspect of BA 37, responsible for facial recognition

Fusiform Gyrus

400

Number of "lobules" in the parietal lobe

2 (superior and inferior)

400

This sulcus separates the post-central gyrus from the superior and inferior parietal lobules

Post central sulcus

400

Damage to the Angular gyrus frequently results in this body-knowledge deficit

Neglect

400

Number of primary gyri on the temporal lobe

3 (Superior, Middle, Inferior)

400

BA 20

Parahippocampal gyrus

500

Wernicke's area is located on this gyrus

Superior Temporal Gyrus

500

The Primary Sensory Cortex is made up of these Brodmann areas

1, 2, 3

500

Damage to the angular gyrus can result in this syndrome, the symptoms of which include acalculia, agraphia, right-left deficits, and finger agnosia

Gerstmann Syndrome

500

BA of the middle temporal gyrus

21

500

Function of the hippocampus

Converting STM to LTM

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