Main structures of the CNS
*look up image
The forebrain
The forebrain is located rostrally (towards the nose) and has two main divisions:
Telencephalon
Cerebrum = Left and Right Cerebral Hemisphere
Cerebral hemispheres =
Cerebral cortex
Limbic system
Basal ganglia
Cerebral cortex
The cerebral cortex surrounds the two cerebral hemispheres Folded/Convoluted: - sulci (small grooves) - fissures (large grooves) - gyri (bulges in between grooves)
Lobes of the central cortex
Frontal
Parietal
Temporal
Occipital
There are two of each lobe in the brain (one in each hemisphere)
Cerebral cortex - sensory cortex
Sensory Cortex: Three areas of the cerebral cortex receive information from sensory organs
Primary visual cortex
Primary auditory cortex
Primary somatosensory cortex
Cerebral cortex - contralateral connections
Contralateral Connections
For all senses except taste and smell:
- Sensory information from the left goes to the right cerebral hemisphere
- Sensory information from the right goes to the left cerebral hemisphere
Cerebral cortex - primary motor cortex
Cerebral cortex - association cortex
Association Cortex
Sensory association cortex
Brain diagram
*look up images 1 and 2
Basal ganglia
Limbic system
Limbic cortex and singular gyrus
- a form of cerebral cortex
Hippocampus
Amygdala
Fornix and mammillary bodies
Lateralization in the cerebral cortex - left side processing
Lateralization in the cerebral cortex - right side processing
Corpus callosum
Thalamus
Thalamus nuclei (groups of neural cell bodies)
Hypothalamus
Mesencephalon
The mesencephalon is the midbrain and it has two major components: