Cerebral Hemispheres
Cranial Nerves
Neurons
The Brainstem
Blood Supply
100

This deep sulcus divides the left and right hemispheres of the brain.

What is the longitudinal fissure?

100

The cranial nerve that is responsible for the sense of smell.

What is the olfactory nerve (CNI)?

100

This transmits information through the nervous system in generating and conducting electrical pulses.

What is a neuron?

100

These structures are found originating in the brainstem and inserting into various parts of the face and neck.

What are the cranial nerves?

100

This artery supplies blood to most of the lateral surfaces of the cerebral cortex.

What is the middle cerebral artery?

200

This lobe of the brain is found deep to the frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes. 

What is the insula?

200

The cranial nerve that controls eye movements

What is the Oculomotor nerve (CN III)?

200

They receive incoming signals from other neurons and transmit them to a neuron's cell body

What is a dendrite?

200

The brainstem is connected to this structure superiorly.

What is the spinal cord?

200

This artery is the main supplier of blood to the occipital lobe.

What is the posterior cerebral artery?

300

The primary motor and somatosensory cortices are arranged in this fashion.

What is somatotopic representation?

300

The cranial nerve that is responsible for transmitting sound and equilibrium information from the inner ear to the brain.

What is the vestibulocochlear nerve (CNVIII)?

300

This insulates axons and speeds up the transmission of the electrical pulses along the neuron.

What is the myelin sheath?

300

In reference to the brainstem, the term ventral means the same as this other directional term.

What is dorsal?

300

Known as the “Circle of Willis,” this arterial structure provides a protective redundancy for cerebral blood flow.

What is the cerebral arterial circle?

400

 The surface topography of the cerebral hemispheres is composed of this kind of matter. 

What is gray matter?

400

The cranial nerve that controls most of the facial muscles for expressions.

What is the Facial nerve (CN VII)?

400

The neurons communicate between other neurons within the central nervous system

What are interneurons?

400

This bulging portion of the brainstem is considered the mid-point.

What is the pons?

400

These two major arteries ascend through the neck and supply blood to the brain, uniting at the base of the brain.

What are the vertebral arteries?

500

This matter connects cells within the brain deep to the gray matter.  

What is white matter?

500

The cranial nerve that innervates the heart, lungs, and digestive tract.

What is the Vagus nerve (CN X)?

500

The junction between two neurons where neurotransmitters are released to transmit signals from one neuron to another.

What is the synapse?

500

The brainstem is found anterior to this cranial structure.

What is the cerebellum?

500

This large sinus, located in the dura mater, drains blood from the brain and directs it towards the jugular veins.

What is the superior sagittal sinus?