Intro to the Brain

Time To Read

2–3 minutes

Date Last Modified

Nervous System Organization

Remember that it is all about the CNS when it comes to the nervous system. Sensory information can come from somatic tissues such as the skin or visceral tissues such as your liver.  Motor output can go to either somatic or visceral tissues as well. Within visceral tissues, there are two more divisions.  The sympathetic division is called the fight or flight response whereas the parasympathetic division is the rest and digest division.  These two are constantly fighting each other much as I and my brother did for ummmm…allllllllllllllllll of my childhood.


Sectioning the Brain

You need to start looking at pictures of the brain.  You must recognize different types of sections. These are created by the frontal, transverse, and sagittal sections you see above.  Most students are quite skilled at identifying a sagittal section. This type of section cuts the brain into a left and right section.  This will be the most common section we use.  However, in the lab, we will use frontal and transverse pictures, which are much more difficult to discern.  Before we are done with the brain, you will have a feel for the anatomy produced by these sections.  Usually the ventricles, or open spaces and the choroid plexuses, or blood capillary networks, are landmarks for these sections.  Take a look yourself at the section on the left and the middle section.  Try to find the open spaces and/or the choroid plexuses.


Neuroanatomical Terms

When we talk about the brain, we have specialized terminology.  We’ve been using ventral and dorsal when referring to the spinal cord. However, when we refer to the brain, we use rostral and caudal.  Rostral means front and caudal means tail.  Look at how this complicates the application of dorsal and ventral.  The dorsal surface of the brain becomes the superior surface and ventral becomes inferior.  I want you to think of a four-legged animal because these terms come from studying them, not bipedal humans. 

The other thing that should be noted is that frontal sections of the brain are usually called coronal sections.  This is because a frontal section of the brain is a cut along the same axis as the coronal suture.


Major Brain Areas

We are going to define and then describe 6 main areas of the brain.  The cerebrum is the big brain hat.  We will cover this last, once you’ve been thoroughly exhausted by the rest of it.  The cerebellum is the little brain. It is caudal and ventral on the brain, or at the back and below the cerebrum. The diencephalon is this internal area here. It contains many important structures we cover here and use often next semester.  The last three major brain areas all belong to what is called the brain stem.  Or, at least, that’s what we called it when I was in school in the 1990s.  Science has obviously progressed since then. Now, we treat these as distinct areas of the brain stem: the midbrain, the pons, and the medulla oblongata.  That is their sequence dorsal (top) to ventral (bottom).


List of terms