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Our divided brain

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... area are connected by a bundle of nerve fibers called the arcuate fasciculus. Damage to the arcuate fasciculus causes a disorder called conduction aphasia. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Our divided brain


1
Our divided brain
  • For more than a century, clinical evidence has
    shown that the brains two sides serve differing
    functions. Accidents, strokes, and tumors in the
    left hemisphere generally impair reading,
    writing, speaking, arithmetic reasoning, and
    understanding. Similar lesions in the right
    hemisphere seldom have such dramatic effects.

2
  • Patients with speech problems gave early
    researchers the first clues about how the brain
    is involved with language. The loss of the
    ability to speak is called "aphasia." The ancient
    Greeks noticed that brain damage could cause
    aphasia. Centuries later, in 1836, Marc Dax
    described a group of patients who could not speak
    properly. Dax reported that all of these patients
    had damage to the left side of their brain. A
    quarter century later in 1861, Paul Broca
    described a patient who could say only one
    word..."tan." For this reason, Broca called this
    patient "Tan." When Tan died, Broca examined his
    brain and found that there was damage to part of
    the left frontal cortex. This part of the brain
    has come to be known as "Broca's Area."

3
  • In 1876, Karl Wernicke found that damage to a
    different part of the brain also caused language
    problems. This area of the brain ("Wernicke's
    Area"), was further back and lower in the brain
    compared to Broca's area. In fact, Wernicke's
    area is in the posterior part of the temporal
    lobe. Broca's area and Wernicke's area are
    connected by a bundle of nerve fibers called the
    arcuate fasciculus. Damage to the arcuate
    fasciculus causes a disorder called conduction
    aphasia. People with conduction aphasia can
    understand language, but their speech does not
    make sense and they cannot repeat words.

4
Speaking the Written Word
  • To speak a word that is read, information must
    first get to the primary visual cortex. From the
    primary visual cortex, information is transmitted
    to the posterior speech area, including
    Wernicke's area. From Wernicke's area,
    information travels to Broca's area, then to the
    Primary Motor Cortex.

5
Speaking the Heard Word
  • To speak a word that is heard, information must
    first get to the primary auditory cortex. From
    the primary auditory cortex, information is
    transmitted to the posterior speech area,
    including Wernicke's area. From Wernicke's area,
    information travels to Broca's area, then to the
    Primary Motor Cortex.

6
  • By 1960 the left hemisphere was well accepted as
    the dominant or major hemisphere, and its
    silent companion to the right as the
    subordinate or minor hemisphere, and the
    left, the one easiest to observe and study. The
    other side is there of course, but backstage.
    (for about 1 in 10 people, including one-fourth
    of all left-handers, speech is processed in the
    right hemisphere. But then researchers found
    that the minor right hemisphere was not so
    limited after all. The story of this discovery
    is a fascinating chapter in psychologys history.

7
  • In 1961, two Los Angeles neurosurgeons, Philip
    Vogel and Joseph Bogen, speculated that major
    epileptic seizures were caused by an
    amplification of abnormal brain activity that
    reverberated between the two hemispheres. They
    therefore wondered whether they could reduce
    seizures in their patients with uncontrollable
    epilepsy by cutting communication between the
    hemispheres. To do this, Vogel and Bogen would
    have to sever the corpus callosum, the wide band
    of axon fibers connecting the two hemispheres

8
  • In a normal brain, stimuli entering one
    hemisphere is rapidly communicated by way of the
    corpus callosum to the other hemisphere, so the
    brain functions as a unit. When the corpus
    callosum of an individual is severed, leaving a
    split brain, the two hemispheres cannot
    communicate. In some forms of epilepsy a seizure
    will start in one hemisphere, triggering a
    massive discharge of neurons through the corpus
    callosum and into the second hemisphere. In an
    effort to prevent such massive seizures in severe
    epileptics, neurosurgeons can surgically sever
    the corpus callosum, a procedure called a
    commissurotomy. If one side of the brain can no
    longer stimulate the other, the likelihood of
    severe epileptic seizures is greatly reduced.

9
  • In a cerebral commissurotomy the surgeon opens
    the skull, lays back the brain's coverings and,
    with a tool called a cerebral retractor, exposes
    the corpus callosum between the two hemispheres.
    The doctor snips through the corpus callosum,
    severing communication between the hemispheres
    and preventing the transfer of seizures .
  • They had tried this experiment with cats then
    monkeys with no serious ill effects. So Vogel
    and Bogen operated. The result? The seizures
    were all but eliminated and the patients with
    these split brains were surprisingly normal,
    their personalities and intellect hardly
    affected. Waking from the surgery, one patient
    even managed to quip that he had a splitting
    headache

10
The Corpus callosum

11
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12
  • In general, the right hemisphere interprets
    information and controls actions of the left side
    of the body. The left hemisphere interprets
    information and controls actions of the right
    side of the body. If the connection between the
    hemispheres is severed, sensory information
    cannot pass to the correct region of the brain in
    order for corresponding response to be made. For
    example callosal apraxia is a form of limb
    apraxia caused by damage to the anterior corpus
    callosum. When a person hears a verbal request to
    perform a movement, let's say to raise both hands
    in the air, the meaning of the speech is analyzed
    by circuits in the left hemisphere.

13
  • Then, a neural command activates the region of
    the brain that contains the memory of the
    movement, the prefrontal cortex.
  • This information is passed to the part of the
    brain that controls the actual movement to be
    performed, the motor cortex.
  • The left motor cortex controls the movements of
    the right hand, and the right motor cortex
    controls the movements of the left hand. In order
    for the right motor cortex to be activated so
    that the left hand can be raised, the analysis of
    the verbal command must be passed from the left
    hemisphere to the right side, through the corpus
    callosum. Thus, the right arm can perform the
    requested movement, but the left cannot.

14
  • So, say a "typical" split-brain patient is
    sitting down, looking straight ahead and is
    focusing on a dot in the middle of a screen. Then
    a picture of a spoon is flashed to the right of
    the dot. The visual information about the spoon
    crosses in the optic chiasm and ends up in the
    LEFT HEMISPHERE. When the person is asked what
    the picture was, the person has no problem
    identifying the spoon and says "Spoon." However,
    if the spoon had been flashed to the left of the
    dot (see the picture), then the visual
    information would have traveled to the RIGHT
    HEMISPHERE.

15
Visual field
16
  • Now if the person is asked what the picture was,
    the person will say that nothing was seen!! But,
    when this same person is asked to pick out an
    object using only the LEFT hand, this person will
    correctly pick out the spoon. This is because
    touch information from the left hand crosses over
    to the right hemisphere - the side that "saw" the
    spoon. However, if the person is again asked what
    the object is, even when it is in the person's
    hand, the person will NOT be able to say what it
    is because the right hemisphere cannot "talk."
    So, the right hemisphere is not stupid, it just
    has little ability for language - it is
    "non-verbal."

17
  • Another type of experiment performed with split
    brain patients uses chimeric figures, like this
    one to the right. In this figure, the face on the
    left is a woman and the face on the right is a
    man. Therefore, if the patient focuses on the dot
    in the middle of the forehead, the visual
    information about the woman's face will go to the
    right cerebral hemisphere and information about
    the man's face will go to the left hemisphere

18
  • When a split brain patient is asked to point to a
    whole, normal picture of the face that was just
    seen, the patient will usually pick out the
    woman's picture (remember, the information about
    the woman's face went to the RIGHT cerebral
    hemisphere). However, if the patient is required
    to say whether the picture was a man or a woman,
    the patient will SAY that the picture was of a
    man. Therefore, depending on what the patient is
    required to do, either the right or left
    hemisphere will dominate. In this case, when
    speech is not required, the right hemisphere will
    dominate for recognition of faces

19
The undivided brain
  • So what about the 99.99 percent of us with
    undivided brains? Have scientist found our
    hemispheres to be similarly specialized? Yes they
    have in several different types of studies. For
    example, when a person performs a perceptual
    task, brain waves, blood flow, and glucose
    consumption reveal increased activity in the
    right hemisphere when a person speaks or
    calculates, activity increases in the left
    hemisphere.

20
Cerebral Dominance
  • Each hemisphere of the brain is dominant for
    other behaviors. For example, it appears that the
    right brain is dominant for spatial abilities,
    face recognition, visual imagery and music. The
    left brain may be more dominant for calculations,
    math and logical abilities. Of course, these are
    generalizations and in normal people, the two
    hemispheres work together, are connected, and
    share information through the corpus callosum..

21
  • LeftHemisphere
  • Language
  • Math
  • Logic
  • RightHemisphere
  • Spatial abilities
  • Face recognition
  • Visual imagery
  • Music

22
Dominance
  • Are you right-handed or left-handed? As you
    probably know, most people (about 90 of the
    population) are right-handed - they prefer to use
    their right hand to write, eat and throw a ball.
    Another way to refer to people who use their
    right hand is to say that they are "right hand
    dominant." It follows that most of the other 10
    of the population is left-handed or "left hand
    dominant." There are few people who use each hand
    equally they are "ambidextrous." Most people
    also have a dominant eye and dominant ear...

23
Dominant Ear?
  • ear's OAE (otoacoustic emission) .
  • Researchers measured the babies OAE with two
    types of sound. First, they used rapid clicks and
    then sustained tones. They were surprised to find
    that the left ear provides extra amplification
    for tones like music, while the right ear
    provides extra amplification for rapid sounds
    timed like speech.
  • "We were intrigued to discover that the clicks
    triggered more amplification in the baby's right
    ear, while the tones induced more amplification
    in the baby's left ear," said Sininger. "This
    parallels how the brain processes speech and
    music, except the sides are reversed due to the
    brain's cross connections."
  • "

24
  • Our findings demonstrate that auditory processing
    starts in the ear before it is ever seen in the
    brain," said Cone-Wesson. "Even at birth, the ear
    is structured to distinguish between different
    types of sound and to send it to the right place
    in the brain."
  • Previous research supports the team's new
    findings. For example, earlier research shows
    that children with impairment in the right ear
    encounter more trouble learning in school than
    children with hearing loss in the left ear.
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