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Brain Anatomy
The brain is divided into distinct parts, each of which controls some aspect
of a person's intellect or personality. However, the size of these parts has no
discernable impact on personality, and you cannot feel them as bumps on the skull,
so their "science" has no real worth. Only their idea of functional localization
remains: that each function of the brain is localized into one or more physical
areas. Neurons tend to cluster according to their function, so that we can say,
"this area in the front of the brain helps us plan," and "this area in the c
enter of the brain directs our movements." The areas are not isolated,
however; the brain relies on communication among its parts, and almost all
functions that it carries out are multi-step, requiring processing efforts
by many areas of the brain. The anatomy of the brain is complex, but it
consists basically of a few large parts divided functionally into many
increasingly smaller sections. The large parts are the
hemispheres and the lobes.
Two hemispheres
The brain is divided into two distinct hemispheres: the left and the right. Each side is essentially a mirror image of the other. They two halves are physically separate entities, communicating only through a thick bundle of nerves called the corpus collosum. Despite their apparent similarity, however, the two halves show some definite functional differences. One basic difference is that the two hemispheres each control the opposite, or contralateral, side of the body. For example, the right somatic sensory cortex receives input from the left side of the body, and the left motor cortex sends signals to the right side of the body. Beyond this basic discrepancy, there are differences in the overall functions carried out by the hemispheres. The most well-known examples are the predominance of language functions in the left hemisphere and of spatial functions in the right.
Four lobes

For simplicity of organization, and somewhat on the basis of functionality,
the cortex of the brain is divided into four lobes along the lines of the major l
umps (gyri) and creases (sulci) in the brain. The four lobes, pictured below,
are the frontal, temporal,
parietal
, and occipital. Each lobe does not carry
out a single function, but rather contains smaller structures that have their o
wn jobs to do. In some cases, as in the case of the frontal lobe, we will not
discriminate between these structures, but rather will pretend that the lobe
is a unified whole; in others, as in the case of the temporal lobe, we will
only look at the smaller structures and their separate functions. Overall,
we will study the function of each major structure in the brain as it applies
to neuropsychology.
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