Outline of the human brain

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the human brain:

Structure of the human brain

Side view of human brain.
Side view of human brain

Visible anatomy

  • Human brain – central organ of the nervous system located in the head of a human being
  • Cranial nerve
    – neuron bundles that connect to the brain on one end, and to locations outside the brain on the other, without having a junction inside the spinal column
    • Cranial nerve zero
      – controversial but commonly found nerve which may be vestigial or may be related to sensing pheromones
    • Olfactory nerve (cranial nerve 1) – smell
    • Optic nerve (cranial nerve 2) – sight
    • Oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve 3) – eye movement (except rotation)
    • Trochlear nerve (cranial nerve 4) – eye rotation
    • Trigeminal nerve (cranial nerve 5) – sensation from the face and certain motor functions such as biting and chewing
    • Abducens nerve (cranial nerve 6) – certain eye rotation
    • Facial nerve (cranial nerve 7) – facial expression and taste sensations from the tongue
    • Vestibulocochlear nerve (cranial nerve 8) – hearing and balance
    • Glossopharyngeal nerve (cranial nerve 9) – sensation from the throat, tonsils, part of the tongue, heart, and stomach. Also facilitates swallowing.
    • Vagus nerve (cranial nerve 10) – output to the intestines and heart, taste information, deep/crude touch, pain, temperature of outer ear
    • Accessory nerve (cranial nerve 11) – specific muscles of the shoulder and neck. Modern descriptions often consider the cranial component as part of the vagus nerve, calling what is left the spinal accessory nerve.
    • Hypoglossal nerve (cranial nerve 12) – muscles of the tongue
  • Spinal cord – bundle of neurons that connects the brain to the peripheral nervous system and coordinates certain automatic reflexes
  • Peripheral nervous system – nerves outside the brain and spinal cord

Microscopic level anatomy

History of the human brain

Brain development

This development section covers changes in brain structure over time. It includes both the normal development of the human brain from infant to adult and genetic and evolutionary changes over many generations.

Typical brain function

This section covers typical brain function as opposed to atypical function discussed below.

Sensory input

  • Sense
  • Sensory system
  • Sensation (psychology)
  • Sight
    • Visual object recognition
      – the ability to visually perceive an object's physical properties
    • Optic nerve (cranial nerve 2) – main sight-related cranial nerve
  • Hearing
    • Culture in music cognition – the impact that a person's culture has on their music cognition
    • Aphasia – "speechlessness", a disturbance of the comprehension and formulation of language
    • Cochlear nerve (part of cranial nerve 8) – the main hearing-related cranial nerve
  • Smell
  • Taste
  • Somatosensory system
  • Equilibrioception
    – sense of body movement, direction, acceleration, and balance
    • Vestibular nerve (part of cranial nerve 8) – the main equilibrioception-related cranial nerve
  • Peripheral chemoreceptor
    in the brain – monitors the carbon dioxide and oxygen levels in the brain
  • Reflex arc – neural pathway that controls an action reflex (activation of spinal motor neurons without the delay of routing signals through the brain)

Integration

  • Functional integration – the hypothesis that the integration within and among specialized areas of the brain is mediated by effective connectivity
    • Neurophilosophy – some observations on this type of approach and localization of function
  • Receptor cell
    – cells that sense external stimuli and conducted that information to the brain
  • Multisensory integration – organization of sensation from one's own body and the environment into usable functional outputs
  • Lateralization of brain function
  • Neurocomputational speech processing – computer-simulation of speech production and speech perception by referring to the natural neuronal processes

Affect

Mind / body

  • Philosophy of mind
  • Body integrity identity disorder
    – when an individual feels they would be happier living as an amputee
  • Phantom limb – when an individual has had a limb removed from the body but still receives sensory input from it

Memory

  • Methods used to study memory – cumulation of evidence from human, animal, and developmental research in order to make broad theories about how memory works
  • Chunking
  • Object permanence
  • Memory and aging
  • Exceptional memory
  • Memory disorder
  • Eureka effect – the common human experience of suddenly understanding a previously incomprehensible problem or concept
  • Muscle memory – the retention in the brain of memories of certain muscle movements, often enabling those specific movement to be duplicated in the future
  • False memory
    • Choice-supportive bias – the tendency to retroactively ascribe positive attributes to an option one has selected
    • Fundamental attribution error – the tendency to overestimate the effect of disposition or personality and underestimate the effect of the situation in explaining social behavior
    • Actor–observer asymmetry – discrepancy between attributions for one's own behavior and for that of others
    • Reconstructive memory – theory that the act of remembering is influenced by various other cognitive processes including perception, imagination, semantic memory and beliefs
    • Confabulation – a memory disturbance characterized by verbal statements or actions that inaccurately describe history, background, and present situations
    • List of memory biases

Integration and cognition

  • Sleep
    • Neuroscience of sleep – the study of the neuroscientific and physiological basis of the nature of sleep and its functions
    • Sleep and memory – memory processes have been shown to be stabilized and sped up by sleep. Certain sleep stages are noted to improve an individual's memory.
    • Microsleep – an episode of sleep lasting from fraction of a second to thirty seconds
  • Dreaming
  • Abstraction – a process by which concepts are derived from the usage and classification of literal concepts
  • Imagination – the ability to form new images and sensations that are not perceived through sight, hearing, or other senses
  • Wakefulness
    • Pre-attentive processing – the unconscious accumulation of information from the environment
    • Preconscious – information that is available for cognitive processing but that currently lies outside conscious awareness
    • Neural oscillation
    • Resting state fMRI
    • Default mode network – network of brain regions that are active when the individual is awake but not focused on the outside world
    • Task-positive network
      – network of brain regions that are active during goal-oriented activity
  • Attention
  • Mindfulness
    • Brain activity and meditation
    • Research on meditation
      – a growing subfield of neurological research regarding what happens in the bodies and brains of people who meditate regularly
    • Yoga-nidra
      – conscious awareness of the deep sleep state

Logic, computation, and information aspects

Executive function

Motor output and behavior

  • Motor skill – a learned sequence of movements that combine to produce a smooth, efficient action to master a particular task
  • Muscle memory – the retention in the brain of memories of certain muscle movements, often enabling those specific movement to be duplicated in the future
  • Behavioral neuroscience

Sexuality, sex differences, and gender differences

Higher level functioning

Atypical brain function

This section covers the major known deviations from typical brain functioning with an emphasis on the resulting magnitude of overall human suffering.

Physical interventions

This section covers attempts to physically alter the brain state to relieve suffering, address atypical functioning or improve performance.

Other

Case histories

See also

External links