Having Aphasia has constricted ability to smoothly verbalize thoughts into proper sentences.
What is Broca's Area?
Receives sensory input (all 5 senses) for touch and body positions.
What are functions of the parietal lobe?
I get a “medal” for being able to breath and pump blood without thinking.
What is Medulla?
“Bell” of the “little brain”; coordinates movement output (balance) and enables nonverbal communication.
What is the Cerebellum?
When my body is overheating during a workout, this part of my brain signals for sweat to be executed to be evaporated to cool my body down.
What is Hypothalamus?
Treatments recovering daily activities, training language, and strength towards the frontal lobe.
What is occupational, speech, and physical therapy?
A progressive disease that destroys memory and other important mental functions as individuals tend to be confused as the brain cell connections degenerate as cells slowly die off.
What is Alzheimer's Disease?
Caused from damage to the diffuse bilateral cerebral hemisphere cortex that controls arousal and awareness.
What is Coma?
Back of the skull, below the temporal and occipital lobe, and behind the brainstem.
What is the location of the Cerebellum?
I regulate fear & anger.
What is Amygdala?
Function of the frontal lobe that controls individuals physical ability to create/control facial expressions.
What are motor functions of the frontal lobe?
I am above the temporal lobe, but under the parietal lobe.
What is the Occipital lobe?
I am feeling relaxed and tranquil.
What is Pons?
The dizziness sensation of spinning accompanied by vomiting or hearing loss associated from balance problems.
What is Vertigo?
A hippo finding its way home.
What is Hippocampus?
Fundamental component of adaptive behavior as it allows living organisms to perceive relations between events in their environment.
What is associated learning?
Receives information from visual fields to have distance and depth perception, color determination, object and face recognition.
What are functions of the occipital lobe?
With the help of Amos and Hal, I send messages to my senses.
What is Thalamus?
Innermost part of the cerebellum containing nerve cells to communicate.
What is the Cerebellum Nuclei?
Within the cerebrum, but immediately below the temporal lobes.
What is the location of the Limbic System?
Area of the prefrontal cortex that sits just above the orbits (eye sockets); can introduce abnormal sexual behavior when damaged.
What is the Orbitofrontal Cortex?
Defects in vision/blindness, difficulty locating objects in the environment, difficulty identifying colors, and even cases of hallucinations.
What are symptoms of damage to the Occipital Lobe?
I become alert when “tickled.”
What is Reticular Formation?
Specific damage to the cerebellum that is complete loss of full bodily control movements.
What is Ataxias?
Amygdala, Hippocampus, Thalamus, Hypothalamus, Basal Ganglia, and Cingulate Gyrus are…
What are the parts of the Limbic System?