Brain Structures and Their Functions PDF
Brain Structures and Their Functions PDF
Brain Structures and Their Functions PDF
FUNCTION
Cerebrum
Cerebellum
Limbic System
Brain Stem
The human brain is ultimately responsible for all thought and movement that the body
produces. This allows humans to successfully interact with their environment, by
communicating with others and interacting with inanimate objects near their position. If the
brain is not functioning properly, the ability to move, generate accurate sensory information
or speak and understand language can be damaged as well.
The nervous system is your body's decision and communication center. The central nervous
system (CNS) is made of the brain and the spinal cord and the peripheral nervous system
(PNS) is made of nerves. Together they control every part of your daily life, from breathing
and blinking to helping you memorize facts for a test. Nerves reach from your brain to your
face, ears, eyes, nose, and spinal cord... and from the spinal cord to the rest of your body.
Sensory nerves gather information from the environment, send that info to the spinal cord,
which then speed the message to the brain. The brain then makes sense of that message and
fires off a response. Motor neurons deliver the instructions from the brain to the rest of your
body. The spinal cord, made of a bundle of nerves running up and down the spine, is similar
to a superhighway, speeding messages to and from the brain at every second.
The brain is made of three main parts: the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain. The forebrain
consists of the cerebrum, thalamus, and hypothalamus (part of the limbic system). The
midbrain consists of the tectum and tegmentum. The hindbrain is made of the cerebellum,
pons and medulla. Often the midbrain, pons, and medulla are referred to together as the
brainstem.
The Cerebrum: The cerebrum is the largest portion of the brain, and contains tools which are
responsible for most of the brain's function.. The cerebrum is divided into a right and left
hemisphere which are connected by axons that relay messages from one to the other. This
matter is made of nerve cells which carry signals between the organ and the nerve cells which
run through the body. The cerebral cortex is divided into four sections, called "lobes": the
frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, and temporal lobe.
What do each of these lobes do?
Thalamus:The Thalamus is located in the center of the brain. It helps to control the attention
span, sensing pain and monitors input that moves in and out of the brain to keep track of the
sensations the body is feeling.
Hypothalamus:The hypothalamus region of the brain controls mood, thirst, hunger and
temperature. It also contains glands which control the hormonal processes throughout the
body.
Limbic System: The limbic system, often referred to as the "emotional brain", is found buried
within the cerebrum. Like the cerebellum, evolutionarily the structure is rather old.
This system contains the thalamus, hypothalamus, amygdala, and hippocampus.
Midbrain:The midbrain, also known as the mesencephalon is made up of the tegmentum and
tectum. These parts of the brain help regulate body movement, vision and hearing. The
anterior portion of the midbrain contains the cerebral peduncle which contains the axons that
transfer messages from the cerebral cortex down the brain stem, which allows voluntary
motor function to take place.
Note that the cerebral cortex is highly wrinkled. Essentially this makes the brain more
efficient, because it can increase the surface area of the brain and the amount of neurons
within it.
A deep furrow divides the cerebrum into two halves, known as the left and right hemispheres.
The two hemispheres look mostly symmetrical yet it has been shown that each side functions
slightly different than the other. Sometimes the right hemisphere is associated with creativity
and the left hemispheres is associated with logic abilities. The corpus callosum is a bundle of
axons which connects these two hemispheres.
Nerve cells make up the gray surface of the cerebrum which is a little thicker than your
thumb. White nerve fibers underneath carry signals between the nerve cells and other parts of
the brain and body.
The neocortex occupies the bulk of the cerebrum. This is a six-layered structure of the
cerebral cortex which is only found in mammals. It is thought that the neocortex is a recently
evolved structure, and is associated with "higher" information processing by more fully
evolved animals (such as humans, primates, dolphins, etc).
The Cerebellum: The cerebellum, or "little brain", is similar to the cerebrum in that it has two
hemispheres and has a highly folded surface or cortex. This structure is associated with
regulation and coordination of movement, posture, and balance.
The cerebellum is assumed to be much older than the cerebrum, evolutionarily. What do I
mean by this? In other words, animals which scientists assume to have evolved prior to
humans, for example reptiles, do have developed cerebellums. However, reptiles do not have
neocortex. Go here for more discussion of the neocortex or go to the following web site for a
more detailed look at evolution of brain structures and intelligence: "Ask the Experts":
Evolution and Intelligence
Brain Stem: Underneath the limbic system is the brain stem. This structure is responsible for
basic vital life functions such as breathing, heartbeat, and blood pressure. Scientists say that
this is the "simplest" part of human brains because animals' entire brains, such as reptiles
(who appear early on the evolutionary scale) resemble our brain stem. Look at a good
example of thishere.
The brain stem is made of the midbrain, pons, and medulla.
http://www.healthline.com/human-body-maps/brain
http://www.md-health.com/Parts-Of-The-Brain-And-Function.html
BRAIN
DEVELOPMENT.
Children are born with all of the brain cells theyre going to have
As babies grow, they learn many things, but they do not get new brain cells. They do not get new
muscles, either. The muscles in a babys arms and legs will develop as she gets older and matures.
In the same way, the nerve cells in the brain (called neurons) will also grow and develop. Muscles
must be used to become stronger. The same is true with the brain. Children need to use their brains
to learn to think.
things like other babies because of natural growth. But in other ways children will grow very
differently. This is because they have many different experiences.
Adults can count on nature taking care of some things. They do not need to teach children every
little skill. Most children will learn to talk without parents teaching them how to move their
mouths. Most children will learn to roll over without the parents doing anything. But children will
not learn to talk if no one talks to them. They will not learn to roll over if they are always in a seat
or being held.
Most experts agree that growth comes from both nature and nurture. It is interesting to look at how
nature and nurture work together. For a babys brain to make connections, she must be healthy and
have what she needs physically. If that happens, some changes will come naturally. But that is not
enough. She must also be in a place that gives her experiences. Nature and nurture together help
her make brain connections and make the connections strong.
younger person. The process is not as natural for an older child as for a younger child.
When Giulia was 15 years old, she decided she wanted to learn English. She learned quickly that it
would not be as easy as learning Korean or Italian. She had to work very hard to start making
connections between brain cells. She had to practice a lot for the connections to become strong.
The more English experiences she had, the stronger the connections became. The stronger the
connections became, the less effort she had to put into thinking, writing, speaking, and reading in
English.
In the first three years, a childs brain has up to twice as many synapses as it will have in
adulthood.
Now that were a little more familiar with the fundamentals of the brain, lets take a look at
brain development in children. Between conception and age three, a childs brain undergoes
an impressive amount of change. At birth, it already has about all of the neurons it will ever
have. It doubles in size in the first year, and by age three it has reached 80 percent of its adult
volume.8,9,10
Even more importantly, synapses are formed at a faster rate during these years than at any
other time. In fact, the brain creates many more of them than it needs: at age two or three, the
brain has up to twice as many synapses as it will have in adulthood (Figure 3). These surplus
connections are gradually eliminated throughout childhood and adolescence, a process
sometimes referred to as blooming and pruning. 11
Why would the brain create more synapses than it needs, only to discard the extras? The
answer lies in the interplay of genetic and environmental factors in brain development.
The early stages of development are strongly affected by genetic factors; for example, genes
direct newly formed neurons to their correct locations in the brain and play a role in how they
interact.12,13 However, although they arrange the basic wiring of the brain, genes do not design
the brain completely.14,15
Instead, genes allow the brain to fine-tune itself according to the input it receives from the
environment. A childs senses report to the brain about her environment and experiences, and
this input stimulates neural activity. Speech sounds, for example, stimulate activity in
language-related brain regions. If the amount of input increases (if more speech is heard)
synapses between neurons in that area will be activated more often.
Repeated use strengthens a synapse. Synapses that are rarely used remain weak and are more
likely to be eliminated in the pruning process. Synapse strength contributes to the connectivity
and efficiency of the networks that support learning, memory, and other cognitive
abilities.16,17 Therefore, a childs experiences not only determine what information enters her
brain, but also influence how her brain processes information.
Genes provide a blueprint for the brain, but a childs environment and experiences
carry out the construction.
The excess of synapses produced by a childs brain in the first three years makes the brain
especially responsive to external input. During this period, the brain can capture experience
more efficiently than it will be able to later, when the pruning of synapses is underway. 11 The
brains ability to shape itself called plasticity lets humans adapt more readily and more
quickly than we could if genes alone determined our wiring. 18 The process of blooming and
pruning, far from being wasteful, is actually an efficient way for the brain to achieve optimal
development.
From Conception to Age Three: An Outline of Early Brain Development
FIRST TRIMESTER
The development of the brain begins in the first few weeks after conception. Most of the
structural features of the brain appear during the embryonic period (about the first 8 weeks
after fertilization); these structures then continue to grow and develop during the fetal period
(the remainder of gestation).19,20
The first key event of brain development is the formation of the neural tube. About two weeks
after conception, the neural plate, a layer of specialized cells in the embryo, begins to slowly
fold over onto itself, eventually forming a tube-shaped structure. The tube gradually closes as
the edges of the plate fuse together; this process is usually complete by four weeks after
conception. The neural tube continues to change, eventually becoming the brain and spinal
cord.20,21
About seven weeks after conception the first neurons and synapses begin to develop in the
spinal cord. These early neural connections allow the fetus to make its first movements, which
can be detected by ultrasound and MRI even though in most cases the mother cannot feel
them. These movements, in turn, provide the brain with sensory input that spurs on its
development. More coordinated movements develop over the next several weeks. 22
SECOND TRIMESTER
Early in the second trimester, gyri and sulci begin to appear on the brains surface; by the end
of this trimester, this process is almost complete. The cerebral cortex is growing in thickness
and complexity and synapse formation in this area is beginning. 20,21,23
Myelin begins to appear on the axons of some neurons during the second trimester. This
process called myelination continues through adolescence. Myelination allows for faster
processing of information: for the brain to achieve the same level of efficiency without
myelination, the spinal cord would have to be three yards in diameter. 14
THIRD TRIMESTER
The early weeks of the third trimester are a transitional period during which the cerebral
cortex begins to assume many duties formerly carried out by the more primitive brainstem.
For example, reflexes such as fetal breathing and responses to external stimuli become more
regular. The cerebral cortex also supports early learning which develops around this time. 24,25
YEAR ONE
The remarkable abilities of newborn babies highlight the extent of prenatal brain
development. Newborns can recognize human faces, which they prefer over other objects, and
can even discriminate between happy and sad expressions. At birth, a baby knows her
mothers voice and may be able to recognize the sounds of stories her mother read to her
while she was still in the womb.26,27
The brain continues to develop at an amazing rate throughout the first year. The cerebellum
triples in size, which appears to be related to the rapid development of motor skills that occurs
during this period. As the visual areas of the cortex grow, the infants initially dim and limited
sight develops into full binocular vision. 28,29
At about three months, an infants power of recognition improves dramatically; this coincides
with significant growth in the hippocampus, the limbic structure related to recognition
memory. Language circuits in the frontal and temporal lobes become consolidated in the first
year, influenced strongly by the language an infant hears. For the first few months, a baby in
an English-speaking home can distinguish between the sounds of a foreign language. She
loses this ability by the end of her first year: the language she hears at home has wired her
brain for English.30,31
YEAR TWO
This years most dramatic changes involve the brains language areas, which are developing
more synapses and becoming more interconnected. These changes correspond to the sudden
spike in childrens language abilities sometimes called the vocabulary explosion that
typically occurs during this period. Often a childs vocabulary will quadruple between his first
and second birthday.
During the second year, there is a major increase in the rate of myelination, which helps the
brain perform more complex tasks. Higher-order cognitive abilities like self-awareness are
developing: an infant is now more aware of his own emotions and intentions. When he sees
his reflection in a mirror, he now fully recognizes that it is his own. Soon he will begin using
his own name as well as personal pronouns like I and me.14,28
YEAR THREE
Synaptic density in the prefrontal cortex probably reaches its peak during the third year, up to
200 percent of its adult level. This region also continues to create and strengthen networks
with other areas. As a result, complex cognitive abilities are being improved and consolidated.
At this stage, for example, children are better able to use the past to interpret present events.
They also have more cognitive flexibility and a better understanding of cause and effect. 14,32
The earliest messages that the brain receives have an enormous impact.
Early brain development is the foundation of human adaptability and resilience, but these
qualities come at a price. Because experiences have such a great potential to affect brain
development, children are especially vulnerable to persistent negative influences during this
period. On the other hand, these early years are a window of opportunity for parents,
caregivers, and communities: positive early experiences have a huge effect on childrens
chances for achievement, success, and happiness.
http://projectflexner.sites.medinfo.ufl.edu/how-we-learn/
https://www.extension.purdue.edu/providerparent/child%20growthdevelopment/braindev.htm
https://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/dev.html
HOW BRAIN
WORK IN
LEARNING
PROCESS
Long-term memories require the generation of new synapses during sle New
synapses are created during REM sleep. Students who sleep for 8 hours have 5 REM
episodes while those who are sleep-deprived have on average on 3 REM episodes. The
sleep-deprived student has fewer opportunities to generate long-term memories.
Implicatons for teaching
Use all parts of the students brain by including reading, writing, verbal processing and
images in your teaching.
Engage the working memory encourage processing of material by requiring active
participation, and requiring students to work with the material. Rehearsel enhances
understanding and increases the likelihood of a long-term memory.
Dont overload the working memory less is more. Remember the novice can only process
7 facts at a time in his or her working memory.
Avoid working memory fatigue Lessons should be presented in 10-20 minute blocks
Encourage long-term memories by creating meaning and creating material that makes
sense to the learner. Relating lessons to real-life situations, and being enthusiastic create
meaning. Know your learners backgrounds so that you relate to past learning and allow the
learner to understand and make sense of the material you are presenting.
Encourage students to get enough sleep. Long-term memories are created during REM
sleep. Without sleep there can be no long-term memories.
Evaluations must assess long-term memory and understanding Too often multiple
choice questions simply test recognition. Short term memory can be temporarily
crammed with blocks of material that allow the student to recognize the correct answer.
However, once the test is completed these facts are erased and never make it to long-term
storage. This phenomenon has been called the Zeigarnik effect.
Further Reading
Knowledge retention is key in both corporate training and education. Users need to remember
learning content so that they can accurately apply it in real-life instances. So when we set out
to create the amplifire software, thoroughly understanding how the brain stores information in
memory was imperative.
At its most basic level, there are four stages of memory critical to the learning process.
1. Encoding
This is the transformation of phenomenon in the environment (sights, sounds, etc.)
into material that the brain can understand. This is essentially a translation process
in which the brain creates a memory of something in relation to what it already
knows.
2. Storage
There are two different types of memory storage, short term and long term. Longterm memory occurs when neuron pathways are established in order to store
information that can be recalled later. Short-term memory does not establish their
neural networks and is believed to be housed primarily in the prefrontal lobe.
3. Retrieval
There are four different kinds of memory retrieval:
Recall allows a person to retrieve information unprompted. This can be tested using
4. Forgetting
This often annoying process is a fundamental part of the brains functioning which
allows less important information to fall away so that more important information
can be retrieved more easily. Research at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and
Self-Organization has shown that the brain forgets information at a rate of 1 bit per
second per neuron.
While the biochemical and psychological processes underlying each of these four stages are
robust and complex, this basic framework is critical for considering how our brains learn and
remember.
6 important things you should know about how your brain learns
POSTED BY BELLE BETH COOPER
Think about that for a minute. Half of your brain power goes to your eyes and the processes
in your brain that turn what you see into information. The other half has to be split up among
all the other functions your body has.
Vision is not only a power-hungry sense, but it trumps our other senses when it comes to
taking in information.
Image credit: Amit Kapoor Storytelling with Data See | Show | Tell | Engage
A perfect example of this is an experiment where 54 wine aficionados were asked to taste
wine samples. The experimenters dropped odorless, tasteless red dye into white wines to see
whether the wine tasters would still know they were white based on the taste and smell. They
didnt. Vision is such a big part of how we interpret the world that it can overwhelm our other
senses.
Another surprising finding about vision is that we treat text as images. As you read this
paragraph, your brain is interpreting each letter as an image. This makes reading incredibly
inefficient when compared to how quickly and easily we can take in information from a
picture.
More than just static visuals, we pay special attention to anything we see thats moving. So
pictures and animations are your best friends when it comes to learning.
Action: Find or make flash cards with images on them. Add doodles, photos, or pictures from
magazines and newspapers to your notes. Use colors and diagrams to illustrate new concepts
you learn.
When the brain takes in new information, it hangs onto it better if it already has some
information to relate it to. This is where starting with the gist of an idea can be helpful: it
gives you something to hang each detail on as you learn it.
I read a metaphor about this concept once that I loved: imagine your brain is like a closet full
of shelves: as you add more clothes they fill up more of the shelves and you start categorizing
them.
Now if you add a black sweater (a new piece of information) it can go on the sweater shelf,
the black clothes shelf, the winter clothes shelf, or the wool shelf. In real life you cant put
your sweater on more than one shelf, but in your brain that new piece of information gets
linked to each of those existing ideas. Youll more easily remember that information later
because when you learned it you related it to various other things you already knew.
Action: Keep a large diagram or page of notes handy that explains the big picture of what
youre learning and add to it each major concept you learn along the way.
Naps can improve learning just like a full night of sleep can. A study from the University of
California found that participants who napped after completing a challenging task performed
better when completing the task again later, compared to participants who stayed awake inbetween tests.
Sleeping before you learn can also be beneficial. Dr Matthew Walker, the lead researcher of
the University of California study, said Sleep prepares the brain like a dry sponge, ready to
soak up new information.
Action: Try practicing your new skillor reading about itbefore going to bed or taking a
nap. When you wake up, write some notes on what you remember from your last study
session.
A Harvard Medical School study found that the first 30 hours afterlearning something are
critical, and sleep deprivation during this time can cancel out any learning benefits of getting
a full nights sleep after those 30 hours are up.
Action: Forget all-nighters. Save practice and study sessions for days when youre alert and
well-rested. And definitely avoid sleep deprivation right after learning something new.
One study told half the participants they would be tested on the information they were
learning, and told the other half they would have to teach someone else what they learned.
Both sets of participants were tested on the information and didnt have to teach anyone else,
but the subjects who thought theyd be teaching others performed better on the test.
The studys lead author, Dr. John Nestojko, said the study implied that students mindsets
before and during learning can make a big difference to how well we learn new information.
Positively altering a students mindset can be effectively achieved through rather simple
instructions, he said.
Though we dont realize it, learning with the idea that well have to teach this information
later tends to invoke better methods for learning subconsciously. For instance, we focus on
the most important pieces of information, the relationships between different concepts, and
we carefully organize the information in our minds.
Action: Keep a notebook or blog where you write about what youve learned. Write about
each new concept you learn as if its a lesson for others.
Schmidt advocates a different approach to learning called interleaving, which mixes up the
information or skills you practice. Another UCLA researcher, Bob Bjork, studies interleaving
in his psychology lab. One of his experiments involves teaching participants about artistic
styles by showing them a series of images on a screen. Some of the participants are exposed
to block practice of artistic styles (all 6 examples of a painters style are shown before moving
on to another painters style), while others have their images interleaved (examples of
different painters styles are mixed in together).
When the two groups are tested afterwards on how well they can recognize a painters style in
a painting they havent seen before, the interleaving group usually scores around 60%, while
the block group scores around 30%.
Surprisingly, around 70% of the participants in this experiment say they think the block
practice was most effective in helping them learn. Clearly we have some work to do to
understand what helps us learn best.
Bjork believes interleaving works better because it plays into our natural abilities to recognize
patterns and outliers. When applied in the real world it also provides an opportunity for us to
review information regularly, as we interleave what we already know with new information.
Some examples for interleaving could be cycling through three different subjects you need to
study before exams, practicing speaking, listening, and writing skills of a foreign language in
tandem rather than in blocks, or practicing your forehand, backhand, and serves in a single
tennis lesson rather than setting aside one lesson for each.
Action: When youre learning or practicing a new technique, practice it interleaved with other
techniques. For instance, if youre practicing a particular golf swing, practice other swings at
the same time to mix it up. If youre learning new information, mix in information you
already knowold vocabulary words and new when youre learning a foreign language, for
instance.
As Bob Bjork says, we all need to become smarter learners. In almost any job, you have to
keep managing some new kind of technology, he said, so just knowing how to manage your
own learning is very important.
http://blog.crew.co/6-things-know-brain-learns/
http://knowledgefactor.com/blogs/breaking-down-brain-learning-process-simplified
CEREBRUM carry
signals between the
organ and the nerve
cells
THALAMUS control the
attention span, sensing
pain and monitors input
that moves in and out
of the brain to keep
track of the sensations
the body is feeling.
LIMBIC SYSTEM
contains the thalamus,
hypothalamus,
amygdala, and
hippocampus.
FUNCTION
BRAINSTEM is
responsible for basic
vital life functions such
as breathing, heartbeat,
and blood pressure.
HYPOTHALAMUS
control the hormonal
processes throughout
the body.
CEREBELLUM is
associated with
regulation and
coordination of
movement, posture,
and balance.
MIDBRAIN help
regulate body
movement, vision and
hearing
Genes provide a
blueprint for the brain,
but a childs environment
and experiences carry
out the construction.
BRAIN
DEVELOPMENT
When connections are
not used, they get weaker
Encoding.this is the
transformation of
phenomenon in the
environment (sights,
sounds, etc.) into material
that the brain can
understand
BRAIN
WORK IN
LEARNING
PROCESS
Long-term memories
These are memories that
are retained for greater
than 24 hours.
Short-term memory that
includes immediate
memory and working
memory.
Immediate memory