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Click to Play! Neuro Quiz  Michael McKeough 2008 The Central Nervous System Identify the correct question.

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Presentation on theme: "Click to Play! Neuro Quiz  Michael McKeough 2008 The Central Nervous System Identify the correct question."— Presentation transcript:

1 Click to Play! Neuro Quiz  Michael McKeough 2008 The Central Nervous System Identify the correct question

2 The Central Nervous System Neuro Quiz Primary Projection Areas 7 Parts of the CNS LobesMisc.Pathology 100 200 300 400 500 Click category value to begin.

3 Primary Projection Areas 100 This area is located on the precentral gyrus. It controls voluntary movement of the opposite side of the body. It contains a homunculus. What is the primary motor cortex? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

4 Primary Projection Areas 200 This area is located on the postcentral gyrus. It receives primary sensation from the opposite side of the body. It contains a homunculus. What is the primary sensory cortex? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

5 Primary Projection Areas 300 This area is located on the superior temporal gyrus. It receives primary sensation from both ears. What is the primary auditory cortex? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

6 Primary Projection Areas 400 This area is responsible for speech production. It is located in the frontal lobe. What is Broca’s area? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

7 Primary Projection Areas 500 This area is the only primary projection region seen on a medial view of the hemisphere. It is located on both banks of the calcarine sulcus. What is the primary visual cortex? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

8 7 Parts of the CNS 100 In this part of the CNS, gray matter is located centrally in an “H” or “butterfly” shape. It contains four regions that serve the somatic and visceral needs of the body. What is the spinal cord? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

9 This subcortical motor control center forms a ventral bridge between the two cerebellar hemispheres. It contains part of the reticular formation. 7 Parts of the CNS 200 What is the pons? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

10 Eye movement and visual and auditory reflexes are controlled by this part. It contains cranial nerve nuclei: III, IV, and part of V. It never subdivides during development. 7 Parts of the CNS 300 What is the midbrain? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

11 This part of the CNS has gray matter located on the outside, folded into sulci and gyri, and is divided in to four lobes. 7 Parts of the CNS 400 What is the cerebral hemisphere? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

12 7 Parts of the CNS 500 This part of the diencephalon regulates autonomic, endocrine, and visceral function. What is the hypothalamus? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

13 Lobes 100 This lobe is responsible for the control of movement, personality, and planning for the future. It extends from the central sulcus to the frontal pole. What is the frontal lobe? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

14 Lobes 200 This lobe is responsible for sensory perception and body image. It extends from the central sulcus to the parietal-occipital sulcus. What is the parietal lobe? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

15 Lobes 300 This lobe is responsible for visual perception. What is the occipital lobe? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

16 Lobes 400 This lobe is responsible for learning and memory. It is located inferior to the lateral fissure. What is the temporal lobe? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

17 Lobes 500 This physiological system is sometimes referred to as the fifth lobe. It is responsible for learning, memory, and emotion. What is the limbic lobe? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

18 Miscellaneous 100 Together these structures form the longitudinal axis of the CNS. What are ascending and descending tracts? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

19 Miscellaneous 200 Together these structures form the segmental axes of the CNS. What are spinal and cranial nerves? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

20 Miscellaneous 300 Spinal nerves emerge from above the corresponding vertebra in this spinal region. What is the cervical region? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

21 Miscellaneous 400 When a bulging or protruding intervertebral disc impinges on the dorsal roots of a spinal nerve it produces this type of symptoms in this location. What is impaired sensation in the corresponding dermatome? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

22 Miscellaneous 500 These are the major neuro- developmental events that shape function after the CNS is formed. What are myelination and synaptic pruning? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

23 Pathology 100 These are the cause and major effect of aging on the CNS. What is the progressive loss of cells and associated decrease in function? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

24 Pathology 200 This principal of organization accounts for why signs and symptoms of impaired function appear on the side of the body opposite brain damage. What is the fact that longitudinal systems (ascending and descending tracts) are crossed? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

25 Pathology 300 In an immature skull, this condition produces an enlarged head. In a mature skull, this condition produces enlarged ventricles. This condition is most often caused by occlusion of the flow of cerebrospinal fluid. What is hydrocephalus? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

26 Pathology 400 This theory explains why damage to a particular region of the CNS produces specific functional deficits. What is localization theory? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board

27 Pathology 500 This is the most common class of tumors arising from within the CNS. What is a meningioma? Click to reveal the question Return to Return to Game Board Game Board


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