530 likes | 655 Views
The human brain. Atkins Peter 1940- Chemist. A cetylcholine : a neurotransmitter that plays an important role in attention, learning, and memory. Amygdala : a part of the limbic system always alert to threats. Axon : the long branch of a nerve cell that transmits information to other cells.
E N D
Acetylcholine : a neurotransmitter that plays an important role in attention, learning, and memory. • Amygdala : a part of the limbic system always alert to threats.
Axon : the long branch of a nerve cell that transmits information to other cells. • Anterior commissure : is a bundle of nerve fibers (white matter) of nerve cells connecting the two cerebral hemispheres.
Brain : the part of the central nervous system enclosed in the cranium of humans and other vertebrates, consisting of a soft, convoluted mass of grey and white matter and serving to control and coordinate the mental and physical actions. • Brainstem : is the posterior part of the brain which includes the medulla oblongata, pons and midbrain.
Broca’s Area:named after the French surgeon and anthropologist Paul Broca, who discovered this area of the brain, Broca's Area is located in the frontal lobe of the brain and acts as the speech centre. Although there are other areas of the brain that also influence speech (Wernicke's Area and the motor cortex), Broca's Area is considered the central component.
Cerebellum:the part of the brain that controls voluntary muscle movements. • Cerebral cortex:the outer layer of grey matter of the brain.
Cerebrum: the largest and most complex portion of the brain. It controls thought, learning, and many other complex activities. It is divided into the left and the right cerebral hemispheres that are joined by corpus callosum which communicates between hemispheres. • Cranium: the top of the skull. It protects the brain. The cranium and the facial bones form the skull.
Cerebrospinal:fluid, it is a liquid found within the ventricles of the brain and the central canal of the spinal cord. • Corpus callosum:is a wide, flat bundle of neural fibers beneath the cortex in the eutherian brain at the longitudinal fissure. It connects the left and right cerebral hemispheres and facilitates inter-hemispheric communication.
Cortical Homunculus: a cortical homunculusis a pictorial representation of the anatomical divisions of the primary motor cortexand the primary sensorial cortex.
Dura mater: a tough translucent membrane that protects the brain and spinal cord. • Dendrites: the branchial structure of a neuron that receives messages.
Diencephalon: is the region of the embryonic vertebrate neural tube that gives rise to posterior forebrain structures. It is made up of four distinct components: 1. thalamus 2. sub thalamus, 3. hypothalamus, and 4. epithalamus.
Epithalamus: its function is the connection of the limbic system to other parts of the brain.
Frontal Lobe one of the four subdivisions of the cerebral cortex. The frontal lobe has a role in controlling movement and in the planning and coordinating of behaviour.
Ganglion: an encapsulated collection of nerve-cell bodies, usually located outside the brain and spinal cord. • Grey Matter: portions of the brain that are grey in colour because they are composed mainly of neural cell bodies, rather than myelinated nerve fibers, which are white.
Growth Cone: A distinctive structure at the growing end of most axons. It is the site where new material is added to the axon.
Hypothalamus: a complex brain structure composed of many nuclei with various functions, including regulating the activities of internal organs, monitoring information from the autonomic nervous system, controlling the pituitary gland, and regulating sleep and appetite.
Hippocampus: a seahorse-shaped structure located within the brain and considered an important part of the limbic system. One of the most studied areas of the brain, it is involved in learning, memory, and emotions.
Interneuron: a neuron that exclusively signals another neuron.
Limbic System: the part of the brain bordering on the corpus callosum: concerned with basic emotion, hunger, and sex.
Medulla:part of the brain stem important for breathing, respiration and other behaviours. • Meninges: the three membranes that envelop the brain and the spinal cord.
Motor Neuron: a neuron that carries information from the central nervous system to muscle. • Myelin Sheath: compact fatty material that surrounds and insulates the axons of some neurons and accelerates the transmission of electrical signals.
Nerve: any of the cordlike bundles of fibers that conduct sensory or motor impulses between the brain or spinal cord and another part of the body. • Neurotransmitter: a chemical messenger that brain cells use to communicate with one another.
Neuron: a nerve cell specialized for the transmission of information and characterized by long, fibrous projections called axons and shorter, branchlike projections called dendrites. • Node of Ranvier: short unmyelinated segment of an axon.
Occipital Lobe: one of the four subdivisions of the cerebral cortex. The occipital lobe plays a role in processing visual information.
Parietal Lobe: one of the four subdivisions of the cerebral cortex. The parietal lobe plays a role in sensory processes, attention, and language. • Photoreceptor: a nerve ending, cell, or group of cells specialized to sense or receive light.
Retina: membrane in the eye that contains light-sensitive cells.
Spinal Cord: The extension of the brain through the vertebral column that primarily functions to facilitate communication between the brain and the rest of the body.
Sympathetic Nervous System: a branch of the autonomic nervous system responsible for mobilizing the body's energy and resources during times of stress and arousal.
Synapse: the point at which a nerve impulse is relayed from the terminal portion of an axon to the dendrites of an adjacent neuron.
Temporal Lobe: one of the four major subdivisions of each hemisphere of the cerebral cortex. The temporal lobe functions in auditory perception, speech, and complex visual perceptions.
Thalamus: a structure consisting of two egg-shaped masses of nerve tissue, deep within the brain. The key relay station for sensory information flowing into the brain, the thalamus filters out information of particular importance from the mass of signals entering the brain.
White Matter: the part of the brain that contains myelinated nerve fibers. The white matter gets its colour from myelin, the insulation covering nerve fibers.