Occipital lobe

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    Working Memory

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    memory relies most heavily on the prefrontal cortex. The brain is divided into three main parts: the brainstem, the cerebellum, and the cerebrum. The cerebrum is then divided into 4 lobes: the frontal, the occipital, the parietal, and the temporal. Each lobe has a couple very important jobs; for example: Frontal Lobe- Personality, behavior, emotions Judgment,…

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    The Brain In El Cambino

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    common to the three studies (Hunt, 2011, p.188). On the other hand, Professor Richard Haier reviewed studies and found a correlation between the volume of some brain areas and intelligence. Again, there was only one area, the left inferior parietal lobe, common to the 50% of the studies revised (Hunt, 2011,…

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    Kalat’s text. Kalat states that people who are born blind utilize their occipital lobe, regardless of their inability to see, for tasks involving touch or hearing. In an experiment on those born blind, researchers temporarily inactivated their occipital lobes, resulting in less accurate readings of Braille letters (Kalat 2016). Even though they could not see anything from the beginning, their brains adapted and used the occipital lobe for touch. In blind migraine sufferers, their cones and rods…

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    neurological illness that damages certain pathways of the brain. This damage can be induced by strokes, head trauma, encephalitis, or conditions that involve anoxic situations. In terms of location, damage primarily occurs to the parietal, temporal, or occipital lobes of the brain, but it tends to be limited to very specific regions of the…

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    Lesser known Facts about FTD and its Types The presence of motor neuron cells are one of the main functions of the brain to do regular thinking activity. The same dead cells are the cause of Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) in men and women. This is also a type of Dementia, which has no permanent cure. The initial stage treatment is avail with various antipsychotic medications along with cognitive and palliative care. Whenever a person is affect with this brain disorder, it is advisable to know…

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    1. Distinguish between afferent and efferent nerves. Afferent nerves are the sensory nerves. They carry information from the world to the brain and spinal cord. Efferent nerves are the motor nerves they carry information out of the brain and spinal cord to other parts of the body. Afferent nerves take in information and efferent nerves carry out information. 2. Study Figure 2.1. What makes up the Central Nervous System (CNS)? The central nervous system is made up of the brain and…

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    brain has four lobes and each lobe have different functions; the frontal lobe controls thought process and language, the parietal lobe controls sensory information such pain and touch, temporal lobe controls memories, and the occipital lobe control visual information. The brain is such an important, no one could live without it. A man named Phineas Gage worked as a railroad construction foreman until a large iron rod struck through his skull taking a large portion of frontal lobe, did Gage…

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    How The Brain Works

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    remembering data and processing it as quickly as 11 million bits per second (The Human Brain). The brain is a very copious system created with four lobes which control emotions, thoughts, skills, memory and actions. To begin with, the brain is divided into four separate lobes, the Occipital, Temporal, Parietal, and Frontal lobes (Parts of the Brain). The Occipital…

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    New Brain Exhibit

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    1. Imagine visiting the new “brain exhibit” at the museum. A model has been built that is as big as a house, and people walk through it, beginning in a small waiting room that represents the very top of the spinal cord. Name and describe the functions of the various structures you would see as you walk through the brain. If you start at the spinal cord you might as well know what it does in relation to the brain. The spinal cord involves the traveling of neural fibers that go to the brain with…

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    Parietal Lobe Case Study

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    nervous system (2) What lobe of the brain is associated with the processing and interpreting of visual stimuli? Answer Choices: A. Frontal lobe B. Occipital lobe C. Parietal lobe D. Temporal lobe Explanation: The occipital lobe is the primary visual processing center. It receives visual input from the retina and interpret the signal into a recognizable image. While the parietal lobe and temporal lobe are also involved in visual perception, their main role differ. The parietal lobe primarily…

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