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Integration and Control IV: The Vertebrate Brain

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Title: Integration and Control IV: The Vertebrate Brain


1
Integration and Control IVThe Vertebrate Brain
  • By Katie Buskirk

2
  • The human brain weighs about 1,400 grams equal
    to about 3 pounds
  • Consisting of white and grey matter
  • White matter- fiber tracts that are white in
    color because of lipid rich myelin sheaths
  • Gray matter- cell bodies of nearly 100 billion
    neurons and supporting cells of the neuralgia
  • Necessary for integration, and physiological
    activities. Ex memory, thought, consciousness,
    and emotions

www.csm.ornl.gov/ SC99/VHwall.html
3
The Structural Organization of the Brain An
Evolutionary Perspective
  • Development of the brain starts as a series of
    three bulges at the the anterior of the dorsal
    neural tube.
  • The groove at the surface of the embryo closes it
    give rise to the tubular structure from where the
    brain and spinal cord (central nervous system)
    develop.
  • Cavities or Ventricles inside the anterior bulges
    are present in the mature brain and are filled
    with cerebrospinal fluid which also fills the
    spinal cord
  • In lower vertebrates the three bulges retain in a
    linear arrangement Ex fish, and frogs
  • In higher vertebrates the bulges fold over on
    each other in the course of development. Ex
    Humans, dogs, and birds
  • These three bulges are still visible in all
    brains and are known as the Hindbrains, Midbrains
    and Forebrain

4
Hindbrain and Midbrain
  • Knobby extension of the spinal cord- the
    brainstem and a convoluted structure- the
    cerebellum
  • Brainstem- contains nuclei involved with reflexes
    and controls sensory and motor neurons
  • Medulla- posterior portion of brainstem it
    control respiration and heartbeat
  • Many fibers cross over between the right and left
    side. The right side receives while the left side
    send and nice versa
  • Cerebellum- is a dorsal outgrowth of primate
    hindbrain.Controls the muscles and movement of
    them
  • Auditory messages go through the pons

5
Hindbrain Midbrain
www.sciencemaster.com/.../ life/brain_02c.gif
www.sciencemaster.com/.../ life/brain_02b.gif
6
Forebrain
  • Two parts
  • -Diencephalon
  • -Telecephalon

www.med.umich.edu/.../ Page20620Forebrain.gif
7
Diencephalon
  • Contain the Thalamus and the Hypothalamus
  • Thalamus- two egg shaped grey matter is main
    relay center between the brainstem and higher
    brain centers
  • Hypothalamus- responsible for activities such as
    hunger, pleasure, pain, and anger. Controls
    thermostat and ADH hormone and oxytocin

8
Telencephalon
  • Towards the back of the brain and has evolved the
    most.
  • In primitive vertebrates it dealt with olfactory
    or rhinencephlon info
  • Corpus Striatum- most primitive structure which
    controls stereotyped behavior of animals
  • Cerebrum- central part, largest part and folded
    into two hemispheres
  • -Cerebral cortex- upper surface of the cerebrum
  • Corpus Callosum- fibers that connect the cerebral
    hemispheres

9
http//faculty.washington.edu/chudler/nsdivide.htm
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10
Reticular Activating System
  • Monitors incoming stimuli and analyzes it
  • It is a core of tissue that runs through the
    brainstem and neurons in thalamus are extensions
  • Ex being able to sleep through normal sounds
    like TV, planes or even alarm clocks, but walking
    up to a faint scream or the turn of door knob

11
Limbic System
  • Subcortial neurons- form loop around the upper
    Diencephalon. Links hypothalamus with the
    cerebral cortex.
  • Believed to translate emotions like hunger into
    complex action like seeking food.

12
Cerebral Cortex
  • Gray matter, thin layer
  • Fish and amphibians dont have any while reptiles
    and birds only have indications of a cortex
  • Primitive mammals have a smooth cortex while homo
    sapiens have a complex cortex
  • In homo sapiens there are four lobes the frontal,
    parietal, temporal, and occipital. They are on
    both hemisphere

13
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14
Motor and Sensory Cortices
  • Information is based on humans that have areas of
    the cortex destroyed, or animals that have been
    stimulated in that area
  • Anterior to Central sulcus in frontal lobe is
    where skeletal muscles are controlled and each
    point of cortex controls a different part of the
    body
  • Parietal lobe- sensory cortex, and responds to
    the stimuli of touch as well as taste, pain and
    temperature.
  • Temporal Lobe- in within the lateral sulcus and
    is the auditory cortex. Receives and send neurons
    to the ears
  • Occipital Lobe- is the visual cortex and controls
    sight. The fovea represents 1 of area of retina
    and makes up 50 of visual cortex

15
The Perception of Form
  • Each of the regions of the visual cortex to which
    different regions of the retina project contains
    a variety of cells, different groups of which
    respond to different types of visual stimuli
  • David H. Hubel and Torsten N. Weisel at Harvard
    University first revealed visual processing in
    experiments. They tested the responses of a cat
    to different stimuli by using microelectrodes to
    record the responses of individual cells in the
    visual cortex.
  • Visual info occurs in the retina before it is
    passed on to the ganglion cells which bring it to
    the brain. The ganglion cells synapse with other
    neurons in the geniculate nucleus and then pass
    the info on to the visual cortex

16
www.yorku.ca/ eye/cortrfld.gif
17
Left Brain Vs Right Brain
  • Two areas related to speech are in the left
    hemisphere they are Broca and Wernickles areas
  • Brocas Area- controls movements of muscles of
    lips, tongue, jaw, and vocal cords. Damage in
    area results in slow and labored speech
  • Wernickles area- surrounds auditory cortex.
    Damage results in meaningless but fluent speech,
    and comprehension of written and spoken words is
    impaired.
  • Left hemisphere is seem as the dominant while the
    right is described as minor or passive
  • The right hemisphere controls musical talent in
    humans, but damage to it results in getting lost
    easily, gets disoriented in new area, trouble
    recognizing familiar voices and faces.
  • Though in young children areas of the right
    hemisphere can take over the damaged of the left
    hemisphere and have normal speech because its a
    developmental process

18
Left Vs. Right
  • Fernando Nottebohm at Rockfeller University
    studied song birds and saw that a lesions in the
    left hemisphere greatly distorted the song though
    canaries with right hemisphere lesions had minor
    changes in their song
  • He also found that the size of the region of the
    song nuclei vary from season to season and bird
    to bird. The size of the nuclei increases during
    the spring and decreases in the fall
  • Females sing very little and have ΒΌ the size of
    males and males with small song centers have a
    small repertories

19

www.ling.upenn.edu/.../ broca_wernicke_speak.gif
20
Split Brain
  • The two hemispheres of the brain are connected by
    the corpus callosum though in cases of epilepsy
    it has been found that severing it lessens the
    severity of epileptic attacks
  • Roger Sperry and coworkers at California
    Institute of Technology launched many tests on
    these patients.
  • It showed that once the corpus callosum was cut
    the two hemispheres were functionally separate
    and behave like two separate brains
  • If patients are asked to identify objects with
    touch they can only name the right hand not those
    in the left hand because the information from
    right hand goes to left side of brain and left
    hand goes to right brain.
  • If left hand is placed on a plastic number 2 they
    are unable to verbally identify but can readily
    tell by extending two fingers

21
www-rohan.sdsu.edu/.../ split_brain_larson.jpg
22
Intrinsic Processing Areas
  • Intrinsic processing can receive and process
    information from neurons in other areas of brain
    do not receive directly relayed sensory.
    Similarly the transmit information to neurons in
    other area but not leading out of the brain
  • Mapping the areas is very complex and biologist
    are just beginning to gain some insight.
  • Posterior region of parietal lobe and lower
    portion of temporal lobe receive signals from
    neurons of visual cortex
  • In primates the proportion of the cerebral cortex
    devoted to intrinsic process is much higher and
    even higher in humans
  • About half the total area involved is located in
    the frontal lobes which was the part of the brain
    tat developed most rapidly during evolution.
  • These activities controls our capacity to
    understand

23
Learning and Memory
  • Learning is defined as a change in behavior based
    on experience
  • Karl Lashey wanted to locate the physical change
    and trace memory or engram. He concluded he could
    not find physical form and that is was all over
    the brain
  • Two types of memory. Short and long
  • Short term memory is looking up a phone number
    and remembering it long enough to call though if
    you call the number repeated times it is
    transferred to long-term memory
  • The establishment of pathways involves
    alternations in the synapses by which neurons
    communicate
  • A blow to the head might cause amnesia which is
    lose of all past long term memories though new
    are able to develop, though Injury to hippocampus
    (part of limbic system) affect short term
    memories but not long term

24
www.morphonix.com/.../ specimens/hippocampus.gif
25
Anatomical Pathways of Memory
  • The principle areas involved in memory are
    hippocampus (seahorse), amygdala (almond),
    thalamus, basal forebrain, and prefrontal cortex
  • Goes from sensory cortex to Hippocampus and
    amygdala then to the basal forebrain and the
    prefrontal cortex
  • The Basal forebrain is the area in which
    degenerates during Alzhemiers disease
  • Amygdala is region responsible for remembering
    not only visual images about the beach but also
    sound, taste and smell
  • Wilder Penfield found that some patients when
    stimulated in certain areas of the cortex they
    felt like they were actually reliving past events

26
www.psy.ohio-state.edu/ psy312/images/cogbrain.gif

27
Synaptic Modification
  • It is easier to tract neurons in invertebrates so
    they are used to test behavior circuits.
  • Eric Kandel at Columbia University worked with
    sea horse and their gill withdrawal. When poked
    on the underside they quickly draw up though if
    repeated poked they become habituated to the
    stimulus and dont draw up
  • Habituation is regarded as a form of learning and
    is associated with a gradual decrease in the
    amount of neurotransmitters released
  • Alternation in the strength of synaptic
    transmission are critical in memory and learning
  • Though models are still trying to be made
    perfected some factors involved are second
    messengers.
  • Learning and Memory have not been fully uncovered
    yet though neurobiologists are on a new levels of
    understanding what is going on in the brain

28
The End!!
www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/.../ brain.jpg
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