Brain (Posterior View)
Anatomy Terms
- 4th Ventricle
- Angular Gyrus
- Anterior Commissure of Brain
- Anterior Lobe of Pituitary
- Brain Stem
- Calcarine Sulcus
- Cavernous Sinus
- Central Sulcus of Rolando
- Cerebellar Peduncle
- Cerebellum
- Cerebral Aqueduct
- Cerebrum
- Choroid Plexus
- Choroid Plexus of 3rd Ventricle
- Cingulate Gyrus
- Cingulate Sulcus
- Corpus Callosum
- Cranial Nerve I - Olfactory Nerve
- Cranial Nerve II - Optic Nerve
- Cranial Nerve III - Oculomotor Nerve
- Cranial Nerve IV - Trochlear Nerve
- Cranial Nerve IX - Glossopharyngeal Nerve
- Cranial Nerve V - Trigeminal Mandibular Nerve
- Cranial Nerve V - Trigeminal Maxillary Nerve
- Cranial Nerve V - Trigeminal Ophthalmic Nerve
- Cranial Nerve VI - Abducens Nerve
- Cranial Nerve VII - Facial Nerve
- Cranial Nerve VII - Nervus Intermedius
- Cranial Nerve VIII - Vestibulocochlear Nerve
- Cranial Nerve X - Vagus Nerve
- Cranial Nerve XI - Accessory Nerve
- Cranial Nerve XII - Hypoglossal Nerve
- Cuneus
- Fornix of Brain
- Frontal Pole
- Hypophyseal Artery
- Hypophyseal Vein
- Hypothalamic Sulcus
- Hypothalamus
- Inferior Colliculus
- Inferior Frontal Gyrus
- Inferior Parietal Lobule
- Inferior Temporal Gyrus
- Interthalamic Adhesion
- Lamina Terminalis
- Medial Frontal Gyrus
- Medulla Oblongata
- Middle Frontal Gyrus
- Middle Temporal Gyrus
- Occipital Pole
- Optic Chiasm
- Optic Recess
- Paracentral Lobule
- Paraterminal Gyrus
- Parietooccipital Sulcus
- Pineal Gland
- Pituitary Gland
- Pons
- Postcentral Gyrus
- Posterior Commissure of Brain
- Posterior Lobe of Pituitary
- Precentral Gyrus
- Precentral Sulcus
- Precuneus
- Quadrigeminal Lamina
- Sella Turcica
- Septum Pellucidum
- Sphenoid Bone
- Stria Medullaris of Thalamus
- Subcallosal Area
- Sulcus of Corpus Callosum
- Superior Colliculus
- Superior Parietal Lobule
- Superior Temporal Gyrus
- Supramarginal Gyrus
- Temporal Pole
- Thalamus (3rd Ventricle)
- Tuber Cinereum
Full Brain (Posterior View) Description
[Continued from above] . . . cerebrospinal fluid and three meninges, beneath the cranial bones; which themselves enclose the brain and consist of one frontal bone, two parietals, two temporals, one occipital, one sphenoid, and one ethmoid bone. Only these pools of fluid and the skull protect the brain from the bumps and grinds of daily living, which would damage this fragile organ, and critically so, since our brain stops growing when we are about 15 years old.
The forebrain and cerebellum are divided into two hemispheres, which are linked by a thick band of nerve fibers. The frontal brain is made up of two parts: the left hemisphere, which influences logic and reasoning and controls the right hand, and the right hemisphere, which influences imagination, spatial thinking (artistic appreciation and creativity), and controls the left hand. For instance, when a professional musician has a stroke that damages the right hemisphere of his brain, his musical ability is often impaired; when the damage is to the left hemisphere, the loss of this ability is less common. The limbic system, which lies at the base of the frontal brain, connects to the spinal cord and is the emotional brain that controls all our instincts of survival.
The aforementioned hemispheres of the brain have areas, called lobes, that perform specific functions. For example, the occipital lobe controls vision. Other lobes control touch and pressure sensation, balance and coordination, and muscle movements. Speech and writing are controlled by the area in the frontal lobe of the dominant hemisphere. Given all these roles, the brain requires large amounts of stored energy for thinking. This is why you may feel the same exhaustion with intense thought processing as you do with a physical workout. Yet it is thanks to the brain that we are able to think, reason, love, forgive, create, and remember, as well as to survive through automatic processes such as breathing and digesting.