localisation of function- certain areas of the brain are associated with certain cognitive functions eg memory
motor cortex
located in the frontal lobe along pre-central gyrus
responsible for movement
different parts control different parts of the body and are arranged logically
both hemispheres have motor cortex but control the opposite side of the body eg left hemisphere controls the right side of the body
highly localised
somatosensory cortex
located in the perietal lobe along a region called the post central gyrus
processed touch
both hemispheres have somatosensory cortex with them receiving information from opposite sides of the body
more sensitive= larger region of somatosensory cortex eg hands
arranged logically
highly localised
auditory centres
located in the auditory cortex in the temporal lobes
sound waves picked by cochlea, converted to nerve impulse to the brain stem then to thalamus which is relay station and then to auditory cortex
not localised
broca's area
responsible for speech production
located in the frontal lobe on the left hemisphere
broca's aphasia- difficulty speaking
case study- Tan couldn't speak or write but could understand spoken language. could only say one syllable Tan
wernicke's area
located in the temporal lobe
responsible for understanding language
wernicke's aphasia- condition where patients can't understand language but can still speak
research support from brain-damaged patients.
patient Tan experienced Broca’s aphasia following damage to his Broca’s area, where his speech production was impaired and he could only say the syllable ‘Tan’.
This matters because it suggests that research on the language centre of the brain supports the idea that certain cognitive functions are localised to specialised brain regions.
the idea of localisation of function has validity.
that language may not be confined to broca's area only
dronkers re-examined the brain of two of brocas patients using MRI scans and he found that other areas besides broca's are has contributed to loss of speech
matters because language is way more complex than being localised to one brain region and instead involves many interactions of several brain regions
biologically reductionist
localised of function has been challenged by lashley's equipotentiality theory
theory suggests that basic motor and sensory functions are localised while higher mental functions are not
lashley's research was based on his work with rats, where he removed areas of their cortex and had them learn to run a maze. he found all areas of the cortex were important in the task
researchers should take a holistic approach when studying cognitive functioning