localisation: the theory that specific areas of the brain are associated with particular physical and psychological functions
hemispheric laterialisation: the dominance of one hemisphere of the brain for particular physical and psychological functions
left brain functions: analytic thought, logic, language, science and math
right brain functions: holistic thought, intuition, creativity, art and music
the human brain can be viewed as being formed of three concentric layers
the central core
the limbic system
the cerebrum
the central core
regulates our most primitive and involuntary behaviours such as breathingsleeping or sneezing
what is the central core also known as and what structures does it include
also known as the brain stem
includes hypothalamus - in the midbrain
the central core
regulates eating and drinking as well as regulating the endocrine system in order to maintain homeostasis
the limbic system
controls our emotions
around the central core of the brain, interconnected with hypothalamus
contains hippocampus; key roles in memory
the cerebrum
regulates our higher intellectual processes e.g
language
memory
problem solving
what is the outermost layer of the cerebrum called
cerebral cortex
appears grey (grey-matter)
what is the cerebrum made up of
left and righthemispheres connected by a bundle of fibres called the corpus callosum
the cerebrum: what does the corpus callosum do?
enables messages that enter the right hemisphere to be conveyed to the left hemisphere and vice versa
each hemisphere is further divided into 4 lobes
frontal lobe
parietal lobe
temporal lobe
occipital lobe
frontal lobe
location for awareness of what we are doing within our environment (our consciousness)
parietal lobe
location for sensory perception
temporal lobe
location for the auditory ability and memory acquisition
occipital lobe
location for vision
motor area
in frontal lobe
responsible for voluntary movements by sending signals to the muscles in the body
motor area
regions of motor area are arranged in a logical order e.g region that controls finger movement is located next to region that controls hand and arm and so on
motor cortex in the left hemisphere is responsible for movement on the right hand side and vice versa
somatosensory area
in parietal lobe
recieves incoming sensory information from the skin to produce sensations related to pressure, pain, temperature etc.
visual area
in occipital lobe
recieves and processes visual info
info from right-hand side visual field is processed in left hemisphere
info from left-hand side visual field is processed in the right hemisphere
auditory area
in temporal lobe
responsible for analysing and processing acoustic info
info from left ear goes primarily to right hemisphere
info from right ear goes primarily to left hemisphere
broca's area
paul broca treated a patient named leborgne, more referred to as 'Tan'
tan could understand spoken language but was unable to produce any coherent words, could only say 'Tan'
broca's area
during broca's post-mortem examination on tan's brain he found a lesion (damage) in the left frontal lobe
he concluded that area was responsible for speech production
people with damage to this area experience broca's aphasia, results in slow and inarticulate speech
wernicke's area
karl wernicke identified a region in the lefttemporal lobe as being responsible for language comprehension which would result in wernicke's aphasia when damaged
what happens to patients who have wernicke's aphasia
they will often produce nonsense words as part of the content of their speech.
speech is often fluent but meaningless
phineas gage (strength of localisation)
whilst working on the railroad in 1848, 25 year old phineas gage was preparing to blast a section of rock with explosives to create a new railway line
during the process, gage dropped his tamping iron onto the rock causing the explosive to ignite
the explosion hurled the metre-length pole through gage's leftcheek, passing behind his left eye, exiting his skull from the top of his head taking a portion of his brain with it - most of his leftfrontal lobe
phineas gage pt 2
gage survived
many people that knew him stated that he turned from someone who was calm and reserved to someone who was quick-tempered and rude
brain scan evidence (strength of localisation)
wealth of evidence providing support for the idea that many neurological functions are localised, particularly in relation to language and memory
e.g peterson (1988) used brain scans to demonstrate how wernicke's area was active during a listening task and broca's area was active during a reading task, indicating the different functions of the areas
higher cognitive functions are not localised - equipotentiality theory
not all researchers agree with the view that cognitive functions are localised in the brain. the work of karllashley (1950) suggests that the basic motor and sensory functions were localised, but that higher vital functions were not
higher cognitive functions are not localised - equipotentiality theory pt 2
lashley claimed that intact areas of the cortex could take over responsibility for specific cognitive functions following injury to the area normally responsible for that function
higher cognitive functions are not localised - equipotentiality theory pt 3
lashley removed parts of the brain from rats and tested their ability to run through a maze. he found that the area of brain removed did not make any difference to their ability to complete the task
higher cognitive functions are not localised - equipotentiality theory pt 4
according to this point of view, the effects of damage to the brain would be determined by the extent rather than the location of the damage
this view recieved some support from the discovery that humans were able to regain some of their cognitive abilities following damage to specific areas of the brain