Term
Left (Dominant) Temporal Lobe lesion can result in? |
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Definition
Fluent aphasia (Wernicke's) |
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Term
Prosopagnosia is loss of ____ and occurs in the ______ lobe. |
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Definition
facial recognition in the posterior temporal lobe. |
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Term
Analysis of color, movement, and texture occur in the ________ lobe. |
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Definition
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Term
A seizure passing through the motor homunculus is called ______ |
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Definition
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Term
Apraxia results from a lesion in the _________. |
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Definition
Frontal lobe (inability to perform voluntary motor act without paralysis - premotor/supplementary motor association cortices) |
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Term
Destructive lesion to the frontal eye field results in horizontal gaze deviation to isilateral side or contralateral side? |
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Definition
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Term
An irritative lesion or seizure to the frontal eye field results in horizontal gaze deviation to isilateral side or contralateral side?
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Definition
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Term
Lesions of the inferior right parietal lobe results in ______. |
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Definition
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Term
Agraphia, acalculia, finger agnosia, and inability to read aloud are effects of a lesion to the _______, also referred as _____ syndrome |
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Definition
Left inferior parietal lobe lesion, aka Gerstman's syndrome |
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Term
Left hemineglect can result from lesions to the _____ lobe |
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Definition
Right superior parietal lobe |
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Term
simultaneous loss of anatomically unrelated higher functions often occurs in which diseases? |
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Definition
dementia, ms, or toxicity |
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Speech production (Broca) |
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Definition
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Face recognition |
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Definition
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Primary sensory cortex |
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Definition
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Musical abilities |
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Definition
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Mathematics and calculation |
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Definition
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Hand motor skills (writing) |
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Definition
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Term
Bilateral, Left, or Right hemispheres?
Face Recognition |
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Definition
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Term
A major source of acetylcholine neurons to the cortex is the _____ |
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Definition
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Term
Largest pyramidal cells are the ____ of layer V in the ________ cortex |
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Definition
betz cells in primary motor cortex (UMNs of corticospinal tract) |
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Term
Layer 2 of the cortex is mostly _____ |
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Definition
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Term
Which layer has the most terminations of cortical association fibers (intrahemispheric) and significant callosal (interhemispheric) input |
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Definition
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Term
What layer is the main termination layer for specific thalamocortical fibers? |
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Definition
Layer 4 (mostly small interneurons - granular) |
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Term
The outer band of Baillarger is located in which layer? |
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Definition
Layer 4 (band is huge in primary visual cortex) |
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Term
Main output layer for corticothalamic fibers is which layer? |
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Definition
Layer 6 - small pyramidal and fusiform neurons |
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Term
Giant Betz cells of layer 5 are output to where? |
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Definition
Most subcortical targets (corticostriate, corticorubral, corticopontine, corticobulbar, corticospinal) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
External Pyramidal layer is which layer of the cortex? |
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Definition
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Term
Layer 1 consists of mostly... |
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Definition
Dendrites and axons (molecular layer) |
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Term
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Definition
multiform layer (corticothalamic fibers) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
[image]
Which area of the cortex is this band very visible |
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Definition
Primary visual cortex (BA 17) - "stripe of genari" "striate cortex" |
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