Supplemental Instruction
Iowa State University / Leader: / Maura
Course: / Bio 255
Instructor: / Manz & Haen
Date: / 10/16/17
Review: List the five lobes and what each one controls in general.
Frontal: voluntary motor functions: personality: learning and memory, decision making, verbal communication
Parietal Lobe: general sensory functions: touch and pressure sensations
Temporal Lobe: hearing and smell
Occipital lobe: processing visual information, storing visual memories
Insula: primary gustatory area
Frontal Lobe:
1.Primary motor cortex is located in the ______, and its the most______part of frontal lobe.
2.Primary motor cortex is where you first originate any signal you want to send/receive to/in the ______; therefore, it controls ______contraction.
3.In front of primary motor cortex is the ______/______. This area is used for anything that’s complex and requires ______motion
4.In front of and inferior to premotor area is the ______area. Its usually in the______hemisphere. The function is to understand______, but it can’t create the ______movements needed to speak. This is the opposite of ______area
5. The area that controls and regulates eye movement is the frontal eye field. This area is anterior to the pre motor area.
Parietal Lobe:
6.Part of the post central gyrus behind the frontal lobe is the primary ______cortex. This cortex interprets ______sensations; some examples are:______, temperature, ______, pressure.
7. Directly anterior/posterior to the primary somatosensory cortex is the somatosensory ______area. This area ______and interprets ______information
Occipital Lobe:
8.This lobe contains the primary ______and the visual ______area.
9.The primary visual cortex receives/sends visual information and processes it. It takes in ______and ______.
10.The Visual association area is ______to primary visual cortex. Its function is to integrate ______information to figure out what you are looking at.
Temporal Lobe:
11.The temporal lobe contains the primary ______cortex, the ______association area and the primary ______cortex.
12.Primary ______cortex is where auditory information is ______sent. Then the information is sent to the auditory ______area to integrate and associate ______to the ______
13.Primary ______cortex receives info from the ______nerve and doesn’t relay information to the ______, unlike most sensory information.
14.The ______area is made up of the ______lobes. Sensory, auditory, olfaction and visual sense all come together to integrate and create a complex understanding of ______.