About the Brain
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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, and send that information 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.
Understanding the Anatomy and Various Parts of the Brain
Frontal Lobe

The executive functions, planning, abstract reasoning, impulse control, sustained attention and insight are all located here. The frontal lobe is highly susceptible to injury.
Parietal Lobes

Injuries to the pParietal lLobes can result in disorders of tactile (touch) function, visual or tactile agnosia (an inability to recognize objects, even though they are clearly "seen" or "felt".), apraxia (an inability to carry out specific purposeful movements, not due to paralysis or weakness), alexia (inability to read), agraphia (inability to write), acalculia (inability to perform mathematical calculations), anosagnosia (inability to recognize one's cognitive or perceptual deficits), contralateral neglect (attentional neglect of the perceptual world on the opposite side of the lesion), disorders of body image, right-left confusion, disorders of spatial ability, and defects in eye movement.
Occipital Lobe

Injury to this area usually results in "blindness" to part or all of the visual field. Usually people experience "holes" or "blind spots" in what they see. Theyre may have be problems picking things out of space or they may misperceive pictures or objects. Recognition of colors may also be disturbed.
Temporal Lobe

Cerebellum

- impaired coordination of motor movement;
- impaired ability to judge distance;
- impaired ability to perform rapid alternating movements;
- tremors upon intentional movement;
- staggering, wide- based walking;
- tendency toward falling;
- weak muscles;
- slurred speech;
- abnormal eye movements.
Brainstem

Functions mediated by the brainstem include: alertness, arousal, breathing, blood pressure, digestion, heart rate, and other autonomic functions. The brainstem contains most of the crainial nerves.

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