What does the CNS consist of?
What are creatures with a CNS called?
Verebrates, i.e. humans, all mammals, reptiles, birds and fish (not insects or octopodes).
What is the other nervous system which exists in the body?
Peripheral Nervous System - stretches out from the brain and spinal chord into every other parts of the body.
What does the Peripheral Nervous System include?
What do Sensory neurones do?
Carry information back to brain as sensations (“5 senses”).
What do Motor neurones do?
Carry messages from brain, telling muscles to move glands to release their hormones.
What links the two hemispheres of the brain together?
“Bridge” of nerve fibres (corpus callosum) allow the left and right hemispheres to communicate with each other.
What is brain lateralisation?
The way the left and right sides of the brain have different functions.
What does the left hemisphere control?
What does the right hemisphere control?
What is the Cortex?
Complex out layer of the brain.
What does the cortex do?
Handles a lot of “higher” brain functions, i.e. conscious thought and interacting with the world around us.
What lobes are the cortex divided into?
What does the Frontal lobe do?
Handles most of our conscious planning.
Contains pre-frontal cortex.
What does the Pre-fronal cortex do?
Handles self-control and decision making (important for aggression).
What does the Parietal lobe do?
Controls language but specialises in touch and direct bodily movements.
What happens if you damage the parietal lobe?
Failure to store new info and problems in understanding what others are saying to us.
What does the Temporal lobe do?
Handles most memory functions.
What does the Occipital lobe do?
Processes sight and our sense of our environment (makes sense of visual info so we’re able to understand it) - located at the back of the brain.
What happens if you damage the occipital lobe?
Cross-eyeing and partial/entrie blindness.
What is the Limbic System?
Sub-cortical structures beneath the cortex, which handle memory and raw appetites, i.e. sleep, hunger, agression and sex (thought to be the source of all our basic emotions).
What are the Sub-cortical structures?
What does the Thalamus do?
Sorts and relays info to the different parts of the forebrain (“the brains switchboard”).
What does the Amygdala do?
Brains “emotion centre” - handles instinctive emotional responses to things, especially anger and fear (If it’s working properly, we should only fear things that are dangerous).