Localisation of Function

    Cards (14)

    • What are the four lobes of the brain?
      • Frontal lobe
      • Parietal lobe
      • Occipital lobe
      • Temporal lobe
    • Describe the Motor Area:
      • Located at the back of the frontal lobe in both hemispheres
      • Controls voluntary movement
      • Left hemisphere controls the right side of the body and right hemisphere controls left side of the body
    • Describe the Somatosensory Area:
      • In the front of the parietal lobe in both hemispheres
      • Represents sensory information from the skin (heat, pressure etc)
      • Information from the right side of the body goes to the left hemisphere and information from the left side of the body goes to the right hemisphere
    • Describe the visual area:
      • In the occipital area of both hemispheres
      • Information from the eyes is sent here
      • Information from the right visual field goes to the left hemisphere and information from the left visual field goes to the right hemisphere
    • Describe the auditory area:
      • In the temporal lobe of both hemispheres
      • Information from the ears sent here
      • Information from the right ear goes to the left hemisphere and information from the left ear goes to the right hemisphere
    • Describe Broca's area:
      • Located in the frontal lobe of the left hemisphere only
      • Responsible for speech production
    • What happens if Broca's area is damaged?
      • Causes Broca's Aphasia
      • Slow and garbled speech
    • Describe Wernicke's Area:
      • Located in the temporal lobe of the left hemisphere only
      • Responsible for language comprehension
    • What happens if Wernicke's is damaged?
      • Causes Wernicke's Aphasia
      • Produce fluent but nonsensical speech
    • Strength - Brain scan evidence:
      • Peterson (1988)
      • fMRI scans to show that Wernicke’s area is active during a listening task, whereas Broca’s area is active during a reading task.
    • Strength - Neurosurgery Evidence:
      • Doughety (2004)
      • Studied 44 OCD patients who had a cingulotomy (surgery on parts of the frontal lobes)
      •  The surgery was found to have a 32% success rate  and a 14% partial success rate.
    • Limitation - Too simplistic:
      • lashley
      • Taught rats to navigate a maze, then removed parts of their brains.
      • Could not find a specific area responsible for their memory of the maze.
      • Proposed the equipotentiality theory
    • What is the equipotentiality theory?
      Basic functions like movement are localised, but higher functions (e.g. memory, cognition) are spread throughout the brain.
    • Strength - Case Study Support:
      • Phineas Gage
      • Severe brain damage due to pole being fired through head
      • Retained most functions of the brain with only some slight shifts in personality
      Counterpoint - Old study so lacks temporal validity and only specific to one person so not generalisable