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Neuropsychology
The brain
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Maja
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The brain is split into two halves called the
cerebral hemispheres
, one on the
left
and one on the right
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The two hemispheres are
contralateral
, meaning each hemisphere senses and controls the
opposite
side of the body
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Cerebral
cortex
It's the
outside
layer of the brain, also called
gray
matter as it's mostly cell bodies doing the processing of the brain
The inside or
white
matter is mostly
axons
and these are the connections between the neurons
The
cerebral cortex
is wrinkly and folded to increase the
brain surface area
allowing more space for processing
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Cerebral hemispheres divided into four lobes
Temporal
lobe - understands and produces spoken language
Frontal
lobe - involved in conscious for planning memory and logical tasks like problem-solving, also regulate social behavior
Parietal
lobe - processes sensations from around the body and brings together information from other parts of the brain
Occipital
lobe - processes visual information coming from the eyes
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Cerebellum
Found at the base of the brain, responsible for functions like
balance
and
coordination
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Localization
of
function
The brain's abilities are not evenly spread across the brain but are
located
in particular places
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Specific
brain areas and their functions
Motor cortex
- controls voluntary movement
Somatosensory cortex
- detects touch sensation from the opposite side of the body
Visual cortex
- processes visual information
Auditory cortex
- processes sound information
Broca's area
- controls speech production
Wernicke's area
- for understanding speech
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Penfield
's work
Developed a brain surgery called the
Montreal
procedure to treat epilepsy
Electrically
stimulated various parts of the brain in conscious patients and recorded the
sensations
they experienced
Found that stimulating the
same
areas of the brain in different people produced
consistent
results
Concluded that many brain functions are
localized
Suggested the interpretive cortex contains a perfect
recording
of memories that can be fully
recovered
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Penfield's suggestion that the interpretive cortex contains a perfect
recording
of
memories
that can be fully recovered is seen as a myth, as the evidence was weak
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Penfield's
findings have been largely confirmed by later research using modern brain
scanning
techniques
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