Brain Regions
Brain Disease
Upstairs/Downstairs
Fun Facts!
Last Week Today
100

This region helps you balance and coordinate your movements

Cerebellum

100

Sudden lack of blood or bleeding into the brain is called what?

Stroke

100

Sensing FEAR is an upstairs or downstairs brain function?

Downstairs

100

When does the thinking brain fully mature?

Mid 20s

100

The heart has how many chambers?

4

200

This area regulates your heart rate and breathing

Brainstem

200

Hydrocephalus is where there is too much of what?

Cerebrospinal fluid (brain water!)

200

Solving a math problem is an upstairs or downstairs brain function?

Upstairs

200

What is this nerve doing?


200

The brain weighs _____ pounds

3

300

This area thinks! It also serves as your short term/working memory.

Frontal cortex (also ok: front of brain)

300

What causes Chronic traumatic encephalopathy?

Repeated head trauma

300

Hitting someone who made you angry is an upstairs or downstairs brain reaction?

Downstairs

300

Where neurons connect, this is called a __________?

Synapse

300

This organ MAKES urine, and this organ STORES it

The kidney and the bladder

400

This lobe is next to your ear

Temporal

400

Wearing a helmet prevents what kind of brain injury

Traumatic brain injury (TBI)

400

Noticing your heart race and palms feel sweaty

Upstairs

400

Name an organ that contracts unconsciously

Heart, intestine, stomach, bladder, gallbladder, arterial blood vessels

400

Provide an example of how the largest organ in the body regulates body temperature

Sweating, shivering, hair standing up, flushing

500

This region is where your long term memories are stored

Hippocampus

500

This disease is caused by uncontrolled firing of neurons

Epilepsy
500

Why does meditation build your brain staircase?

It practices connecting your upstairs and downstairs brain 

500

This part of a neuron promotes speedy transmission

Axon (also acceptable: white matter)

500

This part of the brain processes light into images to produce vision

Occipital lobe (also acceptable: back of the brain)