Introduction: The Human Brain
by Helen Philips
The brain is the most
complex organ in the human body. It produces our every thought, action, memory, feeling, and experience of
the world. This jelly-like mass of tissue, weighing in at around 1.4 kilograms,
contains a staggering one hundred billion nerve cells, or neurons.
The complexity of
the connectivity between these cells is mind-boggling. Each
neuron can make contact with thousands or even tens of
thousands of others, via tiny structures called synapses.
Our brains form a million new
connections for every second of our lives. The pattern and
strength of the connections is constantly changing and no two brains are alike.
It is in these changing connections that memories are
stored, habits
learned and personalities
shaped, by reinforcing certain patterns of brain activity, and
losing others.
Grey matter
While people often speak of their
"grey matter",
the brain also contains white matter.
The grey matter is the cell bodies of the neurons, while the white matter is
the branching network of thread-like tendrils - called dendrites and axons -
that spread out from the cell bodies to connect to other neurons.
But the brain also has another, even
more numerous type of cell, called glial cells.
These outnumber neurons ten times over. Once thought to be support cells, they
are now known to amplify
neural signals and to be as important as neurons in mental
calculations. There are many different types of neuron, only one of which is
unique to humans and the other great apes, the so called spindle cells.
Brain structure is shaped partly
by genes,
but largely by experience.
Only relatively recently it was discovered that new brain cells are being born
throughout our lives - a process called neurogenesis.
The brain has bursts of
growth and then periods of consolidation,
when excess connections are pruned. The most notable bursts are in the first
two or three years of life, during puberty,
and also a final burst in young adulthood.
How a brain ages also
depends on genes and lifestyle too. Exercising
the brain and giving it the right diet can
be just as important as it is for the rest of the body.
Chemical messengers
The neurons in our brains
communicate in a variety of ways. Signals pass between them by the release and
capture of neurotransmitter and
neuromodulator chemicals,
such as glutamate, dopamine, acetylcholine, noradrenalin, and endorphins.
Some neurochemicals work in the
synapse, passing specific messages from release sites to collection
sites, called receptors. Others also spread their influence more widely, like a radio
signal, making whole brain regions more or less sensitive.
These neurochemicals are so
important that deficiencies in them are linked to certain diseases. For
example, a loss of dopamine in
the basal ganglia, which control movements, leads to Parkinson's
disease. It can also increase susceptibility to addiction because
it mediates our sensations of reward and pleasure.
Similarly, a deficiency in serotonin,
used by regions involved in emotion, can be linked to
depression or mood disorders, and the loss of
acetylcholine in the cerebral cortex is characteristic of Alzheimer's
disease.
Brain scanning
Within individual neurons, signals
are formed by electrochemical pulses. Collectively, this electrical activity
can be detected outside the scalp by anelectro encephalogram (EEG).
These signals have wave-like
patterns, which scientists classify from alpha (common while we are
relaxing or sleeping),
through to gamma (active thought). When this activity goes awry, it is called
a seizure.
Some researchers think that synchronizing the activity in different brain
regions is important in
perception.
Other ways of imaging brain
activity are indirect. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
or positron emission tomography (PET)
monitor blood flow. MRI scans,
computed tomography (CT)
scans and diffusion tensor images (DTI) use the magnetic signatures of
different tissues, X-ray absorption, or the movement of water molecules in
those tissues, to image the brain.
These scanning techniques have
revealed which parts of the brain are associated
with which functions. Examples include activity related to sensations,
movement, libido, choices, regrets,
motivations and even racism.
However, some experts argue that we put too much
trust in these results and that they raise privacy
issues.
Before scanning techniques were
common, researchers relied on patients with brain damage caused
by strokes,
head injuries or illnesses, to determine which brain areas are required
for certain
functions. This approach exposed the regions connected to emotions,
dreams, memory, language and
perception and
to even more enigmatic events, such as religious or
"paranormal"
experiences.
One famous example was the case
of Phineas Gage,
a 19th century railroad worker who lost part of the
front of his brain when a 1-metre-long iron pole was blasted through his head
during an explosion. He recovered physically, but was left with permanent
changes to his personality,
showing for the first time that specific brain regions are linked to different
processes.
Structure in mind
The most obvious anatomical feature
of our brains is the undulating
surfac of the cerebrum - the deep clefts are known as sulci and
its folds are gyri. The cerebrum is the largest part of our brain and is
largely made up of the two cerebral
hemispheres. It is the most evolutionarily
recent brain structure, dealing with more complex cognitive
brain activities.
It is often said that the right
hemisphere is more creative and emotional and the left deals
with logic, but the reality is more complex.
Nonetheless, the sides do have some
specializations, with the left dealing with speech and
language, the right with spatial and body awareness.
Further anatomical divisions of the
cerebral hemispheres are the occipitalobe
at the back, devoted to vision,
and the parietal lobe above
that, dealing with movement,
position, orientation, and
position, orientation and calculation.
Behind the ears and temples lie
the temporal
lobes, dealing with sound and
speech comprehension and some aspects of memory.
And to the fore are the frontal and prefrontal
lobes, often considered the most highly developed and most
"human" of regions, dealing with the most complex thought, decision
making, planning, conceptualizing, attention control and working
memory. They also deal with complex social emotions such as regret, morality and
empathy.
Another way to classify the regions
is as sensory
cortex and motor cortex,
controlling incoming information, and outgoing behavior respectively.
Below the cerebral hemispheres, but
still referred to as part of the forebrain, is the cingulate
cortex, which deals with directing behaviour and pain.
And beneath this lies the corpus
callosum, which connects the two sides of the brain. Other important
areas of the forebrain are the basal ganglia,
responsible for movement, motivation and
reward.
Urges and appetites
Beneath the forebrain lie more
primitive brain regions. The limbic system,
common to all mammals, deals with urges and appetites. Emotions are most
closely linked with structures called the amygdala, caudate
nucleus and putamen.
Also in the limbic brain are the hippocampus -
vital for forming new memories; the thalamus -
a kind of sensory relay station; and the hypothalamus,
which regulates bodily functions via hormone release from the pituitary
gland.
The back of the brain has a highly
convoluted and folded swelling called the cerebellum,
which stores patterns of movement, habits and repeated tasks - things we can do
without thinking about them.
The most primitive parts, the midbrain and brain stem,
control the bodily functions we have no conscious control of, such as breathing,
heart rate, blood pressure, sleep
patterns, and so on. They also control signals that pass between the
brain and the rest of the body, through the spinal cord.
Though we have discovered an
enormous amount about the brain, huge and crucial
mysteries remain. One of the most important is how does the
brain produces our conscious
experiences?
The vast majority of the brain's
activity is subconscious.
But our conscious
thoughts, sensations and perceptions - what define us as humans - cannot yet
be explained in
terms of brain activity.
Grey matter
Chemical messengers
Brain scanning
Structure in mind
position, orientation and calculation.
Urges and appetites
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