describe the visual and auditory connections to the hemispheres
Optic Chiasm
-where axon from each eye cross to the opposite side of the brain
why some people have had their corpus callosum cut and how that operation affected their everyday lives and their ability to do conflicting tasks with their two hands
- much less frequent seizure and they stay on one side of body
Split brain people
functions of the left hemispheres
- dominant speech production
functions of right hemisphere
relationship of handedness and language dominance to the anatomical differences between the hemispheres
-corpus callosum matures greatly between 3 and 5 to facilitate comparison of stimuli between hands
-mature corpus callosum integration of actions with 2 hands
95% of right handed people left hemisphere is strongly dominant for speech
-most left handers are the same but some have right dominance or mix
-use both hemispheres for all but very simple tasks (concept of being right brained or left brained has many flaws)
Planum temporale
-larger left hemisphere for 65% of people
Language abilities of chimps
Language abilities of Bonobos
Language abilities of Parrots
problems with the hypothesis that language is a product of overall intelligence
evidence for and against the development of language as a special module
Broca’s aphasia causes
Broca’s aphasia symptoms
Wernicke’s aphasia causes
-damage to Wernike’s area
Wernicke’s aphasia symptoms
Characteristics of Wernicke’s aphasia
parallels in the brain between language and music
describe the symptoms of dyslexia and some contributing anatomical, physiological, and functional factors
similarities and differences in the early processing of conscious vs. unconscious stimuli and some factors that can select certain stimuli for consciousness
masking
-brief stimulus, activates more strongly in conscious condition (without masking)
Unattended stimulus
-meaningful stimulus captures attention faster than meaningless
Consciousness is a threshold phenomenon
-when a stimulus activates enough neurons to a sufficient extent activity reverberates, magnifies and extends over much of the brain