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last updated:

Feb 3, 2024
  

[Brain Image]    

PSY 340 Brain and Behavior

Class 10: Structure of the Vertebrate Nervous System  OUTLINE

   

Structure of the Vertebrate Nervous System

[Comparison of Animal Brains]

A. Terminology to Describe the Nervous System

Human Nervous SystemVisible
            Human Head & Torso 

Central Nervous System (CNS)

  • Brain
  • Spinal Cord  

Peripheral Nervous System (CNS)

Any nerve that does not belong to the CNS 

  • Somatic Nervous System (SNS)
  • Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
  • Enteric Nervous System (ENS): Usually seen as part of ANS (more below)

Directions in the Nervous System

 Directions
          in the Nervous System

Rostral from ROSTRUM - A bird's beak [& the prow of a ship]

Dorsal from DORSUM - An animal or person's back

Ventral from VENTER - The belly or abdomen

    • A ventriloquist speaks from the belly.

Caudal from CAUDA - The tail of a horse

    • The origin of the word, coward, since one sees the tail of the horse when a horse rider flees from battle
Superior is ABOVE while Inferior is BELOW
Proximal
is NEAR while Distal is FAR
Ipsilateral occurs on the same side
Contralateral occurs on the other side

[Anterior/Posterior]






  • Lamina (laminae, pl.)
  • Column
  • Tract (Projection)
  • Nucleus (nuclei, pl.)
  • Ganglion (ganglia, pl.)
  • Gyrus (gyri, pl.)
  • Sulcus (sulci, pl.)
  • Fissure

[Spinal Cord]B. The Spinal Cord

Bell-Magendie law


C. Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)

[OTC Cold Medicines]1. Sympathetic Nervous System

The sympathetic branch of the ANS prepares the body for action: fight or flight.

2. Parasympathetic Nervous System

The parasympathetic branch of the ANS helps to restore the body, build up energy & supplies needed in the future, and relax.

3. Drugs & the ANS

GI Tract and Enteric Nervous System4. GI Tract and Enteric Nervous System (ENS)







The Brain: Divisions

 
  • Hindbrain
  • Midbrain
  • Forebrain
    • Thalamus
    • Hypothalamus & Pituitary Gland
    • Basal Ganglia
    • Basal Forebrain
    • Hippocampus
    • Cerebral Cortex (in the next class)

Hindbrain


Anterior & Posterior Cerebellum

[Chase Britton]

Britton Missing Cerebellum

Chase with Older Brother 2019
Chase with his older brother


Medulla (oblongata)

Pons (the "bridge")

  • Ascending reticular formation/ascending reticular activating system
    • Raphe system: major serotonin system
Cerebellum ("little cerebrum" or "little brain" with ca. 70 billion neurons)
  • Movement & balance
  • Time-related behaviors (rhythm, drum playing)
  • Simple learning & conditioning
  • NEW: role in cognition, language, & affect (emotion)
  • Anterior: motor & movement
  • Posterior: cognition, language, affect
  • Rapid model building of body interacting with the world around it


Agenesis of the Cerebellum [No or partial cerebellum at birth]

Chase Britton - Boy Without a Cerebellum (and Pons)

YouTube Video

Update (9/17/2013): Chase is now 6 years old, has begun 1st grade (he was in kindergarten 2012-13), plays with his older brother Alex on his iPad, can count to 30, reads short words, and has a service lab/Great Dane dog named "Missa".

Update (8/14/14): Chase attended and met with Lady Antebellum at the Erie County Fair this year. 

Updates in Dec. 2019 & May 2020. Chase is now 12-13 years old, uses both a wheelchair and a special walker. His father, David E. Britton, unfortunately died of stomach cancer at age 50 in May, 2020. 

2024 No new updates on Chase who would now be 16-17 years old



Chinese Woman, 24, found to lack cerebellum (2014)

In what seems to be only the 9th documented case, a 24-year-old woman in China went to the hospital complaining of a headache and was found to have been born without a cerebellum.

No Cerebellum (Feng
                          Yu et al., 2014)

Feng Yu et al. (2014)

45-year-old man in India found to lack cerebellum (2018)

cerebellar agenesis omair 2018

Midbrain


Tectum
("roof")

  • Superior Colliculus ("upper little hill")
  • Inferior Colliculus ("lower little hill")

Tegmentum ("floor covering" or "rug")

Substantia Nigra ("dark substance")

Forebrain

Outer surface = Cortex (Latin = Bark of tree) [in next class]

Limbic System (linked set of structures beneath the cortex including olfactory bulb, hypothalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, & cingulate gyrus)

Thalamus ("antechamber")

Hypothalamus ("beneath the thalamus")

Pituitary Gland

Basal Ganglia

  • caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus
  • Basal Forebrain

    • nucleus basilis

    Hippocampus ("sea horse")

    Lobes of the Cerebral Cortex - Covered in next class

    Ventricles and Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)

    • cerebrospinal fluid [CSF]: Clear, colorless, watery substance akin to blood plasma
      • shock absorber or cushion and support for the weight of the brain
      • nutrition (vitamins, hormones)
      • waste removal
      • CSF is formed by the choroid plexus within the ventricles
      • CSF flows throughout the ventricles and around the extracelluar space of the brain
      • CSF is reabsorbed into the blood stream via the meninges


        Ventricles

    Circulation of the CSF

     



    This page was first posted February 6, 2005