This lobe processes what you see.
What is the Occipital Lobe?
This is the length a short term memory can be stored
What is a 1 minute.
Lighter colored brain matter that allows quick messages such as reflexes.
What is White Matter?
These are the 3 parts of the brain stem.
Special senses include Sight, Hearing, Smell, and this.
What is taste?
When you're touched, this lobe goes off.
What is the Parietal Lobe?
This is one way memories can be converted into long term memories.
What is repetition, practice, real life application.
Called the little brain. Helps with posture and balance.
What is the cerebellulm?
The primary function of the brain stem.
What is to connect spinal cord and brain.
While rods are used for sensing light, these are for sensing red, blue, and green.
What are cones?
Listening to your friend's awful story activates this lobe.
What is the Temporal Lobe?
Taste short term memories would be stored here.
What is the parietal lobe.
Darker colored matter that allows for Deep Thinking and processing
What is Gray Matter
Function of the Midbrain.
What is processing reflexes, hearing, vision, pain, sleep, arousal, monitor surroundings.
Part of the eye where light is absorbed and taken by the optic nerve.
What is the Retina?
If you can't solve a math problem, this lobe is failing you.
What is the Frontal Lobe
Episodic long term memories are stored here.
What is the hippocampus.
The very outside layer of the brain.
What is the Cortex?
Function of the Pons
What is breathing, facial movements, help with balance and hearing.
This part of the eye can change shape to allow an image to focus.
What is the lens?
All of your memories are stored under this lobe.
What is the Temporal Lobe
Elicit, emotional memories are stored here.
What is the amygdala.
Found in the center of the brain. Controls homeostasis like thirst and hunger.
What is the Hypothalamus?
Functions of Medula
What is Heart Rate, Blood Pressure, Autonomic activities.
Photoreceptors absorb light. These absorb sensations such of smell and taste.
What are Chemoreceptors?