SEARCH
🇬🇧
MEM
O
RY
.COM
4.37.48
Guest
Log In
Homepage
0
0
0
0
0
Create Course
Courses
Last Played
Dashboard
Notifications
Classrooms
Folders
Exams
Custom Exams
Help
Leaderboard
Shop
Awards
Forum
Friends
Subjects
Dark mode
User ID: 999999
Version: 4.37.48
www.memory.co.uk
You are in browse mode. You must login to use
MEM
O
RY
Log in to start
Index
»
Neurobiology Lecture
»
Chapter 1
»
Brodmann's Area
level: Brodmann's Area
Questions and Answers List
level questions: Brodmann's Area
Question
Answer
Motor speech area
Areas 44 and 45
Pioneered Brodmann’s area
Korbinian Brodmann
Sense and localization of touch, temperature, vibration, pain, sensory perception (two-point discrimination, proprioception, etc.)
Areas 1, 2, 3
Ability to distinguish two separate touches on the skin at the same time (e.g. Which has more sensation? Lips or fingertips?)
Two-point discrimination
Inability to recognize letters or numbers
Agraphesthesia
Inability to identify the object you are touching
Astereognosia
Inability to feel vibration
Pallhypesthesia
Ability to determine your location in space even with eyes closed
Proprioception
The only cell in the epidermis (majority of the receptors are in the dermis)
Merkel cell
Primary motor cortex (Precentral gyrus)
Area 4
Paralysis of the contralateral side of the body, including facial palsy, arm or leg. One limb is very weak, but not completely paralyzed
Monoparesis
Weakness of the entire left or right side of the body
Hemiparesis
Somatosensory association cortex
Area 5
Premotor and Supplementary Motor Cortex
Area 6
Frontal eye fields
Area 8
Dorsolateral / Anterior Prefrontal Cortex (DLPFC)
Area 9
Anterior Prefrontal Cortex
Area 10
Orbitofrontal Area
Area 11
Primary visual cortex
Area 17
Secondary Visual Cortex (V2) / Prestriate Cortex
Area 18
Associative Visual Cortex
Area 19
Processing phonological properties of written word
Area 37
Confrontation naming
Areas 18, 19, 37
Sign language
Areas 19 and 37
Inferior Temporal Gyrus
Area 20
Middle Temporal Gyrus
Area 21
Superior Temporal Gyrus (Part of Wernicke's Area)
Area 22
Fusiform Gyrus / Occipitotemporal Gyrus
Area 37
Temporal Poles
Area 38
Angular Gyros
Area 39
Lesion causes language disorders by fluent speech paraphasias where a lot of words are jumbled and nonsensical sentences are spoken
Areas 22, 39 and 40
Sensory area for speech
Wernicke’s Area
Motor speech area
Areas 44 and 45