The Brain
The Brain Pt 2
Lobes of the brain
Where the brain controls what
Talents of the brain
100

Controls the most basic functions of life, including breathing, attention, and motor responses

What is the brain stem?

100

Consists of two almond-shaped clusters, and is primarily responsible for regulating our perceptions of and reactions to aggression and fear



What is the amygdala?

100

Responsible primarily for thinking, planning, memory, and judgment



What is the frontal lobe?

100

A principle that the brain is wired such that in most cases the left hemisphere receives sensations from and controls the right side of the body, and vice versa

What is contralateral control?

100

The forming of new neurons

What is neurogenesis?

200

The area of the brain stem that controls heart rate and breathing

What is the medulla?
200

Consists of two "horns" that curve back from the amygdala, important in storing information in long-term memory

What is the hippocampus?

200

Extends from the middle to the back of the skull and is responsible primarily for processing information about touch



What is the parietal lobe?

200

The part of the cortex that controls and executes movements of the body by sending signals to the cerebellum and the spinal cord

What is the motor cortex?

200

The brain's ability to change its structure and function in response to experience or damage, enables us to learn and remember new things and adjust to new experiences

What is neuroplasticity?

300

Narrow network of neurons that filter outs some of the stimuli that are coming into the brain from the spinal cord and relays the remainder of the signals to other areas of the brain

What is the reticular formation?

300

Responsible for memory and emotions, including our responses to reward and punishment

What is the limbic system?

300

At the very back of the skull, processes visual information

What is the occipital lobe?

300

Receives information from different parts of the body, namely the skin's sensory receptors as well as from the movements of different body parts



What is the somatosensory cortex?

300

The folding of the cerebral cortex

What is corticalization?

400

Egg-shaped structure sitting just above the brain stem that applies still more filtering to the sensory information coming from the spinal cord and through the reticular formation, and it relays some of these remaining signals to the higher brain levels



What is the thalamus?

400

Cells that surround and link to the neurons, protecting them, providing them with nutrients, and absorbing unused neurotransmitters



What are glial cells?

400

Responsible primarily for hearing and language

What is the temporal lobe?

400

The area located in the occipital lobe (at the very back of the brain) that processes visual information

What is the visual cortex?

400

A chemical that relays signals across the synapses between neurons



What is a neurotransmitter?

500

(literally, "little brain") consists of two wrinkled ovals behind the brain stem. It functions to coordinate voluntary moveme

What is the cerebellum?

500

Folds that separate each hemisphere into four lobes

What are fissures?

500

The outer barklike layer of our brain that allows us to so successfully use language, acquire complex skills, create tools, and live in social groups

What is the cerebral cortex?

500

Responsible for hearing and language

What is the auditory cortex?

500

A process in which neurotransmitters that are in the synapse are reabsorbed into the transmitting terminal buttons, ready to again be released after the neuron fires

What is reuptake?