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00:00 | you guys ready to sprint? We our stretching this morning. Alright. |
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00:06 | start off where we left off. on the spinal cord, spinal cord |
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00:11 | the fibers that are going in and . What's the next thing, |
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00:16 | ruthless. Two routes If you forget . It's that's okay. Roots form |
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00:20 | form the spinal nerves, spinal nerves the Remy. We got the dorsal |
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00:25 | goes to the ventral, which is we're looking at because they're going to |
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00:30 | the plexus is and then the remote we ignore for today. All |
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00:36 | So here we are. We're in plexus is we've talked about the cervical |
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00:40 | . Cervical plexus is neck and back the head. Right? So now |
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00:45 | in the break your plexus, brachial is the weird one. It's a |
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00:48 | one. It's the hard one. right. But we're not going to |
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00:52 | about it because I found a new and the picture makes it easier. |
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00:57 | ? So first off, you have understand that this is a structure where |
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01:01 | Remy. They're gonna join together right the plexus and then they're gonna separate |
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01:07 | then they're gonna join together again in weird combinations. All right. So |
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01:11 | going to see is this weird So like I said, you start |
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01:14 | the Remy. So here's your Right? And then what they're gonna |
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01:17 | is they're gonna join up together and gonna form trunks and circles here represent |
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01:22 | trunks. Okay, So you can there are these combinations like C. |
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01:27 | and C. Six come together and formed the superior. Then they form |
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01:31 | middle. Well the middle is all itself and then the inferiors formed by |
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01:36 | . A. And T. And what's happening here is that's where |
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01:39 | getting those criss crossing of those those fibers as they're going through and then |
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01:45 | trunks so the rain might go to . The trunks then divide and each |
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01:50 | divides into an anterior posterior uh So you can see here here's the |
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01:56 | trunk. This would be the post . I tried to make it clear |
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01:59 | the little dotted lines, here's the with the square and you can see |
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02:04 | the posterior anterior posterior and anterior. But the idea here is ray my |
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02:10 | trunks trunks split into divisions and then divisions come back together in various combinations |
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02:17 | create the chords. And we're going put three chords. And all the |
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02:22 | are named based upon their location versus artery going down the middle of the |
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02:30 | . It would help if I actually out where we are. Okay so |
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02:41 | did not press the button. I I pressed. Oh yeah I |
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02:44 | It is. Here's the cords. so their name relative to the axillary |
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02:48 | is the one that's going down the . So the posterior one would be |
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02:52 | that. The interior the media one be on this side of the laterals |
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02:55 | so if you have your artery you're sitting like so. Okay, Very |
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03:03 | . But it's just the name medial lateral. That's easy post here behind |
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03:06 | again. I'm not so concerned that know the combinations if this was a |
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03:12 | and we had a cadaver and we dig through that arm then it would |
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03:16 | a bigger deal. Okay. What interested in is what forms from these |
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03:22 | and these are the nerves of the . Okay, so the nerves that |
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03:27 | most interested in, you knowing are five nerves? All right. The |
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03:32 | slater nerve, muscular cutaneous, radial , median nerve and ulnar nerve. |
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03:37 | can already see these two. Kind simple. You probably know figure out |
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03:40 | those to go right. They're gonna along the length of the old and |
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03:45 | radius. Where is the medial nerve gonna run? Probably between them. |
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03:49 | , that's right, muscular cutaneous. kind of tells you what it |
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03:53 | It's gonna innovate the skin and the of the arm. Axillary. Where |
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03:56 | that deal with, what do you ? Armpits and this region. |
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04:01 | so if we take a picture, at that. It actually shows it |
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04:06 | lot better so that you can actually . So I'm gonna repost these. |
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04:09 | figured this out like 10 minutes before . Like I just got to get |
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04:12 | better picture. So this is a picture. And it kind of shows |
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04:16 | how these nerves work. So you see the axillary nerve. It's the |
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04:20 | . It's the deltoid muscle as well the the cutaneous, the skin around |
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04:25 | axillary region, muscular cutaneous, it's um the lateral portion of the |
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04:31 | Do I get that right? Uh see where we anterior arm muscles. |
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04:37 | . All right. But you kind get a sense right muscular cutaneous radial |
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04:41 | . It's gonna be the posterior So back here as well as the |
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04:45 | muscles. Alright, So whenever you this, remember this is your |
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04:50 | This is not your arm. That's forearm arm, forearm. Okay. |
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04:56 | regard to the median nerve. Um can see median nerve is going to |
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05:01 | um down to your fingers and mostly your hand. It does some of |
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05:06 | anterior forum as well. All Here's the easy way to remember |
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05:10 | Have you ever fallen asleep on your ? I woke up and I can't |
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05:14 | anything. Have you noticed that like fingers don't work three fingers do, |
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05:19 | vice versa. Three fingers don't work do. Well, this is trying |
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05:23 | show you that. Okay, that's that innovation comes from, shows you |
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05:27 | which nerve you pressed up against. the owner nerve is going to be |
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05:33 | intrinsic cans muscles but the anterior medial the last 1.5 medial digits. |
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05:41 | so that's what you need to know the break hill plexus. Just know |
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05:47 | nerves and the general regions that they . Okay. Sacral plexus. All |
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05:54 | . So that means we had to here. We have the service on |
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05:57 | break. He'll. The other way can think about is the one that |
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06:01 | squeezes and get you. Alright. sorry. That star trek reference very |
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06:07 | star trek Reference sacred plexus. And lumbar plexus are the ones for the |
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06:13 | limbs. Alright. Easy way to them up, lumbar goes to the |
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06:18 | , goes to the back. All . In fact, some books actually |
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06:23 | combine them together and call them the lumbago sacral plexus. Got to make |
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06:27 | I get the combination right? All . So, we're going to be |
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06:31 | with the sacred first. It's posterior , so it comes down and goes |
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06:36 | through the side. It's going to from these particular Remy from the spinal |
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06:43 | . And again, I'm not interested memorizing these. What I'm interested |
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06:47 | What is it going to? What's forming? Alright. Typically what it's |
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06:51 | do is you're gonna see one large that then divides in the two. |
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06:55 | so what we say is there's an and posterior division. The anterior division |
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07:00 | to innovate muscles that are flexing And then the post here division tends |
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07:08 | innovate muscles that extend. So there's flex. There's your extension. All |
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07:14 | . The two nerves were really the nerve is the sciatic nerve. |
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07:19 | So that's the big nerve that goes down the middle. You know? |
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07:23 | nerve, this is that nerve that really good when you stretch, |
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07:27 | When you do uh when you bend it's the one that goes right through |
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07:31 | gluteal muscles. You know which one talking about? Ever catch someone put |
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07:36 | elbow in there and you're like oh Right, that's the one. And |
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07:41 | to do it's going to split into or two different nerve, the tibial |
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07:46 | and the common fibula nerve. All now remember, this is going down |
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07:50 | the back. So what we're doing the tibial nerve, posterior thigh, |
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07:58 | your leg planter foot muscles. So you see what we're doing here? |
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08:03 | going down the back, posterior back of the leg and then underneath |
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08:08 | foot. So basically sticking on that . Common fibula nerve is gonna be |
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08:13 | knee muscles and the anterior and lateral muscles. So here an N |
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08:20 | okay, well I should say here and lateral anterior lateral leg muscles. |
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08:29 | sacred lumbar plexus, which I should put after that one, but it's |
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08:35 | same picture. Alright, so you see here what we have again is |
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08:41 | anterior plexus there's some overlap with the . Not as complex as the break |
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08:49 | , but it does have an anterior division. And what we're gonna do |
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08:53 | we're gonna form two nerves, femoral and operator. All right? The |
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08:58 | nerve, that's the main nerve of posterior division operators? The main nerve |
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09:03 | the anterior division. Just like we over here where we divided these up |
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09:07 | we basically get these two divisions And those are the main nerves out |
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09:12 | them. All right. What we're do is anterior thigh. And over |
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09:18 | is medial thigh. And if you at the picture, this makes your |
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09:21 | a little bit easier. It shows the anterior view. So, here's |
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09:26 | anterior thigh, right? Here's your thigh, nice and color coded, |
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09:35 | ? And also medial aspects of the leg. So, those are the |
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09:41 | is and I think these two pictures make it a lot easier to see |
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09:45 | they're going. I really looked hard a sacred plexus one and they didn't |
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09:51 | it in my two minutes. Quick through the through the stuff. All |
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09:58 | . It's probably in there someplace. was just like, must find these |
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10:03 | . I wanted to find a simple like That. That's simple. five |
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10:08 | . Easy to identify, right? don't necessarily match our colors, but |
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10:12 | good here. Two colors. Makes life easy. They're much more complex |
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10:17 | if you want to go find and I'll get these posted up as |
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10:20 | as I can after class. so, those are the plexus is |
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10:26 | and we can be done with So, what I'm interested in is |
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10:29 | plexus, Which nerve? Where does go ken what we're gonna do now |
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10:38 | we're now finally getting to the right? We spent time talking about |
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10:44 | spinal cord, we talked about the nerves. So now what we're gonna |
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10:47 | is we're going to focus in on structures of the brain. We're gonna |
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10:51 | with the cerebrum. The cerebrum has these landmarks and you look at |
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10:56 | it basically looks like a bunch of squiggly lines. But anonymous can use |
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10:59 | to identify or use them to help different areas of the brain. So |
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11:04 | you see a bump, it has special name that's called a gyrus |
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11:09 | which is really hard to say, when you're used to seeing Gyros, |
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11:12 | have Circus, the circus is where two bumps go together and go |
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11:17 | It's not a very deep groove, that groove is that sulcus. And |
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11:21 | we have fishers. And so here's example, fisher fisher is a groove |
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11:26 | goes really, really deep and actually probably even be separated. So that |
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11:30 | , you can actually come along and that and you basically come down to |
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11:34 | right there. Alright, here's another fishery, pull those two things |
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11:38 | We'll see a picture in a moment it is actually pulled apart and you |
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11:41 | actually look deep to that. so these are landmarks that we were |
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11:46 | to use to help us identify different of the brain. All right. |
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11:49 | so the brain has four major We've already learned two of them in |
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11:53 | very generic way. And we're gonna down a little bit deeper over the |
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11:57 | of the class. But this large right here is the cerebrum, this |
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12:01 | tiny thing right there is the cerebellum this right here sticking down before you |
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12:06 | to the spinal cord that is called brain stem so far so good. |
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12:10 | then the picture you can't see in in this particular picture of the dying |
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12:14 | because it sits underneath the temporal right on top of the brain |
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12:19 | All right. And we're gonna we're walk through them. Alright? So |
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12:23 | what you do is you go from cerebrum work your way down through the |
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12:27 | cord and out through the spinal Sorry, your book does it |
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12:31 | All right. And in fact I well I think I tried very hard |
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12:35 | kind of follow that kind of pattern with the street. Now if you're |
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12:39 | familiar shri brahma is divided into two . Their column hemispheres. So you |
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12:44 | a left and a right hemisphere. ? So which is your left |
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12:48 | Which side? Right? Over My right, you're right, my |
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12:56 | , right, which is weird So this is left, this is |
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13:00 | , right. So just remember cadaver the table and you're good to go |
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13:05 | right, so the left and right hemisphere, it's divided by that longitudinal |
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13:12 | . Each hemisphere has five areas. names of these areas are called |
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13:17 | And the limbs of the lobes are simple. The four of them are |
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13:21 | up. You should already know because sit underneath the bones in which they're |
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13:25 | , which they're named. So we the frontal lobe, right, parietal |
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13:29 | , occipital lobe, temporal lobe. you have one on each side |
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13:34 | Unlike the bones where it's just one lobe or one frontal bone. And |
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13:38 | we have this weird one called the , which I've grayed out because it's |
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13:42 | hard to see. That is the . You have to go underneath the |
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13:47 | lobe and underneath the frontal lobe and where it kind of sits all |
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13:53 | The frontal lobe is defined by this sulcus. All right? So you |
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13:59 | see the dotted line here dotted line . That central sulcus serves as the |
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14:05 | between the frontal lobe and the parietal . So if you can find that |
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14:10 | sulcus, you can and it's a easy one to find, right. |
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14:14 | it goes all the way down to lateral fissure. You'll see here that |
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14:18 | called lateral sulcus because that's what they to call it. But then they |
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14:21 | it's really a fissure. So they the name. So some books still |
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14:24 | the old name. All right. here. So here's the frontal |
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14:29 | frontal lobe. As the first You're going to see in that frontal |
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14:33 | just uh anterior to the central sulcus called the pre central gyrus. It's |
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14:42 | in front of the central gyrus or central sulcus. Alright, so what |
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14:48 | you think the name of that virus right there Post central gyrus? |
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14:53 | Nice, simple, easy language. right. Typically when we think of |
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14:57 | frontal lobe, I want you to of voluntary motor activity. Such you |
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15:01 | around speech, your thought. So thinking about the frontal lobe? Is |
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15:07 | thinking about the thinking about the thinking on and on. Decision making and |
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15:12 | ? All right. So this is of the thought area. The next |
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15:17 | the the one back is gonna be lobe. Again we have the pre |
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15:21 | sorry the post central gyrus, it's separated by the from the front |
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15:26 | by the central circles. It's separated the occipital lobe by the parietal occipital |
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15:31 | . So it even names it. then here we have the lateral uh |
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15:36 | , lateral fissure stops about there. if you keep that dotted line going |
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15:40 | the way back to the parietal lobe serves as the boundary between the parietal |
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15:43 | and the temporal lobe, parietal lobe all about receiving uh somatic sensory |
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15:51 | Alright, Samantha sensory input. I'm gonna give a big time out |
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15:56 | . Do not write this down About of your brain is visual processing. |
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16:02 | . So what we're doing is we're these unique areas but the likelihood is |
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16:07 | processing is taking place there as Okay. But I'm going to point |
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16:11 | where primarily visual processing starts. All . So Samantha century parietal lobe, |
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16:22 | lobe got our parietal occipital sulcus. so what we have now, there's |
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16:29 | occipital lobe primarily involved in visual processing visual memory. All right. The |
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16:36 | I remember this is when I look things, my eyes act as |
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16:40 | they are not and they project to back of my brain. So that's |
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16:45 | I remember visual. All right, movement, voluntary movement and thinking. |
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16:54 | sensory information, visual information. And moved down to the temporal lobe, |
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17:00 | lobe sitting on the side. We've talked about the lateral fissure. That's |
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17:05 | be what separates from the frontal uh it from the parietal, the parietal |
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17:11 | sulcus is what separates the temporal from occipital and what we have here is |
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17:17 | structure that deals primarily with auditory processing well as olfactory processing. What's |
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17:23 | Thank you. Sense a smell And visual processing as well. Alright. |
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17:29 | this is primary visual everything kind of out from there. And finally we |
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17:33 | the insula which is that deep structure I just described. Um here. |
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17:37 | memory and Gus station. Alright. know what gas station is sense of |
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17:45 | . All right. What we described are basically the five. Well four |
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17:49 | the five special senses plus the non sense of touch. When you look |
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17:57 | the white matter of the of the you're going to see now remember how |
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18:04 | looked at the spinal cord. White was on the outside. Gray matter |
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18:07 | on the inside. What we've done is where the processing, there's more |
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18:12 | in the cerebral, there's not enough on the inside for the gray |
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18:14 | So, we need to put gray on the outside again. So, |
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18:17 | white matter sits inside of a layer gray matter. This gray matter is |
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18:23 | the cortex because it's on the So here you can see the white |
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18:28 | kind of drawn over with all these . What these lines represent in the |
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18:33 | are the fibers and where they Alright. They have three basic directions |
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18:39 | they have three basic names. We commiserated tracks, commiserate tracks move between |
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18:45 | two areas on either side of the . Alright, that's the blue |
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18:52 | Alright. We have association tracks. association track basically moves from one part |
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18:58 | the brain to the other part of brain. Alright, If you go |
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19:01 | distances, it's called longitudinal physically, they go to a nearby joy iris |
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19:08 | one virus to the next, then refer to it as an RQ eight |
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19:12 | creates a little tiny art little Mcdonald's . All right. And then if |
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19:16 | going down to the spinal cord and . We refer to the projection |
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19:23 | All right. So between hemispheres commercial the hemisphere in different parts. It's |
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19:30 | association if it's nearby it's called It If it's far away it's |
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19:39 | So moving from the cerebrum, we're to come back to the cerebrum in |
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19:42 | a minute. We're gonna move down the brain stem. Did you guys |
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19:47 | watch pink in the brain when you growing up? Do you remember the |
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19:50 | song? No. All right. look it up later. Youtube. |
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19:55 | seconds long. It was one of little shorts that they throw in there |
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20:00 | . And the brain singing the parts the brain and the central part of |
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20:06 | song is brain stem brainstem. All . Three parts of the brain |
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20:12 | We're gonna start from the bottom and our way up. I don't know |
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20:15 | I just did it that way. , this bottom part near the spinal |
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20:18 | is called the medulla medulla oblon gata its long name. But if you |
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20:23 | watched the water boy Water boy. wrong with what? What What What |
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20:29 | he say about the alligator? Why do why are alligators so ornery? |
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20:35 | . No, no, no. because of their medulla oblon gata. |
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20:38 | wrong with your brain. Your medulla gata. You know, there's a |
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20:42 | line in there. There you I used to want to create a |
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20:47 | of all the movies. You should . But I just realized that you |
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20:51 | don't have enough time to do So. All right. Alright. |
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20:55 | there's a medulla medulla. It plays role in autonomic reflexes. Alright, |
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21:01 | again, here we get to the nervous system again. Um It is |
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21:06 | for relaying information from the hypothalamus which gonna be up here, down to |
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21:11 | different structures that the hypothalamus controls. we're dealing with visceral structures like the |
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21:18 | . Um And uh cardiovascular system in of the blood vessels, all sorts |
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21:24 | fun stuff. Alright. You also is where the fourth ventricle is |
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21:30 | Then you have the ponds ponds. this fatter middle region? It basically |
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21:35 | as a site of relay between the and the cerebrum as well as from |
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21:39 | cerebellum to parts of the spinal Lastly we have the midbrain. Midbrain |
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21:45 | on top of everything. It is that's responsible head and eye movement in |
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21:51 | to movement and sound. Did you ever watch a brady bunch? Of |
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21:54 | not. You guys are too young know what the brady bunch is? |
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21:58 | , don't know the brady bunch. . You okay. Did you watch |
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22:02 | actual brady bunch or just a All right. Alright. So did |
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22:06 | watch the actual brady bunch. Alright. There's an episode of the |
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22:11 | bunch and I gotta be careful here I can get really distracted where Greg |
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22:15 | learned how to drive. Greg is oldest son. Alright. He learned |
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22:19 | to drive and he's in a parking and as he's backing out of the |
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22:22 | space, he rear ends somebody and and that person takes them to small |
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22:27 | court. Right? So we've got now, this is the whole |
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22:32 | The guy shows up to court, an older man and he is there |
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22:36 | that neck brace as if Greg had plowed right into him and it's clear |
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22:42 | gonna lose because you know 16 years just learning how to drive, he's |
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22:46 | mom and dad's car and he's rearing an old man and all is |
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22:51 | We're down in the last five minutes the episode, how is Greg going |
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22:53 | get out of this? And I never remember the dad's name. Alright |
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22:58 | , the dad shows up, he's the courtroom, in the back of |
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23:00 | courtroom and he knows the old man faking it because you know, gotta |
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23:05 | Greg, Greg's not gonna lie The Bradys and he drops his |
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23:09 | the dad drops his briefcase and it the ground and makes up and when |
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23:14 | hear a sound like that, what your natural response behind you to look |
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23:20 | turn now if you had whiplash you be able to turn your neck and |
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23:26 | what the guy did. He turned Aha faking it. Well that's because |
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23:32 | midbrain allows you to do that? what does it? Alright that didn't |
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23:37 | for you. Has anyone, have ever heard someone yell hey behind you |
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23:41 | you turned around was your name? ? No, but she turned around |
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23:46 | . That's a reflex that's going to as a result of the midbrain. |
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23:50 | watch tennis ball moving. You ever that thing scurrying your apartment over in |
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23:58 | corner of your eye. U Yeah. All right, structures that |
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24:06 | need to know. All right. the medulla we have the pyramids. |
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24:11 | pyramids are these structures right here. one has been stripped away. You |
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24:15 | see right there this is where many those tracks that we're gonna be looking |
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24:20 | in the next unit are going to traveling. All right there. Called |
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24:23 | cortical spinal tracts. It tells you the name where they go to and |
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24:26 | they come from. Core tico from core tex and they're called the cortical |
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24:34 | so they're going down to the spinal . See how clever named this |
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24:41 | All right. You'll see that these there's gonna be a deck association when |
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24:46 | see that word deck cassette deck means cross over. And so there's a |
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24:51 | of fiber that occur in the All right. We also have the |
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24:55 | . Alright. The olives are named what they look like. Alright, |
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24:58 | there's an olive, there's an Alright. There's going to be actually |
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25:02 | inferior olive. Very nuclear and there's to be superior Olivari nuclear. We'll |
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25:06 | those in just their job is to deal with appropriate receptive information from the |
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25:11 | , appropriate deceptive means sense of Alright. It's knowing the position of |
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25:17 | body in space. Alright, So standing like this, I know that |
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25:22 | co anchored when I turn my head this. I know my head is |
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25:26 | . That's a real scientific term. anchored, right? This is a |
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25:33 | word to say. Just say it be bad uncle. It's a fun |
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25:37 | . It's a fun word. You have good uncle. Come on. |
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25:41 | Dunkel, Dunkel. Alright, uncles are basically areas where we have |
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25:47 | between two structures. So it kind sits on the surface and it kind |
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25:51 | bulges out. Which is why it's a fun word. We have the |
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25:56 | cerebellum podunk. Als So if you an inferior one, you must have |
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26:01 | Superior one. So the Medulla is the bottom. So this is where |
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26:04 | cerebellum and tracks out of the cerebellum are coming and that's going to connect |
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26:09 | medulla to the cerebellum. You can tracks are going into tracks are going |
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26:15 | . A whole bunch of autonomic I remember we said that the autonomic |
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26:19 | system is going to be signaled via medulla from things from the hypothalamus and |
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26:24 | things are gonna be signaled outward. so we have the vezo motor center |
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26:28 | controls blood pressure. We have the of the respiratory center. All |
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26:33 | We're gonna see one. There's one the ponds as well. There's also |
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26:37 | for all these other fun things that get to do in your life, |
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26:40 | and sneezing and salivating and gagging and and vomiting. Don't do all that |
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26:44 | the same time. That's not All right. I'm pointing these two |
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26:49 | out now because you're going to need later. All right. We have |
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26:53 | nucleus kenyatta's and the nucleus Godzilla's And they're gonna be located this |
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27:00 | I don't think even shows them. right. Um There's the middle um |
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27:05 | . And what they're gonna do is gonna go to this region kind of |
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27:07 | here. And you're going to see nuclei located a little further, I |
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27:12 | not in this particular slice, but the medulla. And it's the nucleus |
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27:17 | honest. And nucleus priscilla's that serve a pathway from the lower region of |
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27:22 | spinal cord that we're gonna name later we're talking about this sensory pathways. |
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27:28 | right. And so the way that go from uh the basically from the |
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27:36 | cord, what they're doing is they're up and then they're going to stop |
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27:39 | and then they keep going on up the thalamus. Alright? And they |
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27:44 | this medial medial meniscal pathway to So right. I'm not gonna spend |
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27:50 | lot of time. Not in I'm not sure. I even ask |
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27:52 | a question about this. I'm pointing out now, so that you'll see |
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27:56 | later. Okay. So that you're like weird structures that I've never heard |
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28:01 | . All right. And then we a whole bunch of cranial nuclei. |
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28:04 | basically, you can say it's cranial number eight through cranial nerve, number |
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28:08 | . You're gonna see it's basically these of divisions like that. So cranial |
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28:11 | number 8-12 are located the medulla when get to the ponds. This is |
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28:16 | you'll see. And again, all doing is looking at one slice and |
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28:19 | of the pond is elongating. we have these podunk als there |
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28:23 | So, there's the media and the paid uncle. This one is showing |
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28:26 | the superior. I guess it Uh You know, there's Sarah Beller |
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28:30 | said I said cerebral didn't I? did say, okay, good. |
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28:35 | are cerebral paid uncles as well. . We don't see them. |
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28:38 | anyway, here's superior. You can it off to the side. There's |
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28:40 | middle pontin respiratory center. Where do think that plays a role in |
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28:47 | That's Yeah, that's you're in the place. What does it play a |
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28:50 | ? It plays a role in regulating . Superior. All very complex. |
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28:54 | is sound located again? What cranial are located here. It's gonna be |
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29:00 | and part of eight. So just eight was seen here. It's kind |
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29:04 | shared between those two zones. the midbrain is the one where we're |
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29:10 | gonna see some stuff and it's easy identify. All right, so here's |
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29:15 | cerebral pad. Uncle. Alright. cerebral and uncle is basically the tracks |
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29:21 | tracks coming from the cerebrum. So , it's just gonna be these bumps |
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29:27 | stand out. All right next to cerebral proud uncle is the substantia |
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29:36 | What that says the black substance? ? Because it's darker. It has |
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29:41 | bunch of melanin in it and that makes it look darker. Did you |
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29:45 | how we name things? So imagine it is 60 years ago cutting open |
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29:51 | . It's like oh yeah, that right. There is darker than the |
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29:53 | one. So that's the dark That's why they named now what it |
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29:57 | . It has a whole bunch of that are responsible producing dopamine. And |
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30:02 | had a we have a colleague here I have a colleague here who described |
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30:06 | once as it's like a sprinkler system the brain. It basically just produces |
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30:10 | bunch of dopamine where you have dopamine . They're going to respond to that |
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30:14 | . I just kind of picture like her picture. All right. |
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30:24 | this is made here and it's released the other parts of the brain where |
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30:28 | are dopamine receptors. All right. next region is a tag mentum? |
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30:35 | plays a major role in maintaining You have the red nuclei. Why |
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30:40 | you think they call it that? it's kind of red and then you |
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30:44 | the particular formation which is kind of general region I think actually. |
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30:49 | they're showing it here. We're gonna a better picture of this particular formation |
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30:53 | a role, primarily an alertness. , So sleep wake cycle, but |
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30:58 | has other roles in a whole bunch different areas. Right? So I'm |
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31:03 | to see if this is the So you can see here's a different |
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31:07 | . This is still the midbrain, you can see how, depending on |
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31:11 | you cut it, it's going to a little bit different looking all |
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31:14 | And that's for our purposes. That's important. Right. I'm not going |
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31:17 | sit there and take a slice and , where are you? Because we |
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31:22 | haven't looked through all the sizes. right. We have this region right |
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31:31 | , this kind of beige stuff and see the that that central canal looking |
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31:37 | . The central canal looking thing is the, you know the aqueduct. |
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31:41 | ? It's the cerebral aqueduct, we that earlier. Remember when we talked |
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31:46 | the ventricles? Right, well around cerebral aqueduct is the perry aqueduct all |
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31:52 | matter. So in the next to aqueduct gray matter, that's its name |
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31:59 | we have the tech TEM in the team. We have the superior and |
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32:02 | curricula. This deals with that visual where you're describing about turning your head |
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32:06 | response to visual input as well as your head in response to auditory |
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32:12 | In other words, you hear, , you're going to turn around because |
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32:15 | hear the sound right? Or if see something zipping by your head, |
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32:20 | gonna turn and try to look at . That's a reflex, right? |
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32:25 | what your brain does. That's going be done in these curricula within the |
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32:28 | TEM. All right now, part the reason I'm naming and showing you |
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32:32 | things is not to just start adding into your list of stuff to |
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32:38 | I know it feels like it but that's not what I'm doing. |
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32:41 | . When we come back and start at the tracks and where they're coming |
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32:45 | where they're going, they're going to coming to nuclei in these different locations |
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32:50 | the names of these tracks come to areas and so I'm trying to connect |
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32:54 | for you now. So it's oh now I know where they're coming |
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32:58 | going to and then here we can we have cranial nerves, number three |
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33:02 | cranial nerve number four, I throw out here to kind of show you |
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33:07 | picture of the articular formation. every textbook on the planet has a |
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33:12 | that looks like this, which is terrible picture. It doesn't explain anything |
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33:15 | all. It's a bunch of arrows look like they're just going places and |
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33:20 | what it's just trying to show So look there are these regions of |
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33:24 | that sit within the brain stem and just kind of are kind of in |
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33:30 | middle. Like so, so this shows you a slice of the medulla |
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33:33 | you see that would be the particular highlighted in green there. All |
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33:38 | And so this, this structure these nuclei collectively make up what is called |
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33:44 | articular activating system and what their job is to keep the body alert and |
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33:52 | . Alright, so for example, see that it plays a role in |
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33:55 | and cardiac function. It plays a in the vomiting center. Mix duration |
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34:00 | in some sex functions, you in maintaining problems, sexual arousal and |
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34:06 | . The thing that I like to out is this part levels of alertness |
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34:10 | this is an easy one to Have you ever fallen asleep in |
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34:13 | I mean that that embarrassing fall asleep class. Not the one where you |
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34:17 | kind of sit there and do I see those all the time. |
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34:20 | are the easy ones to find the ones are this one where put your |
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34:25 | down. Mm That's particular activating Alright. It's basically like, oh |
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34:34 | body is moving and it shouldn't be I'm like, I'm alert now I'm |
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34:38 | and that's an easy one to Another one is like, have you |
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34:41 | driven? I mean think about being a small car, guys drive small |
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34:44 | . Anyone, have you been stuck two semis doing 75 miles an hour |
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34:49 | I 45. Yeah. And you feel the whole car capitated. It's |
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34:54 | vibration. Yeah, it's like you're knuckling it going, I cannot |
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34:58 | cannot move. Please, please, don't get any closer to me. |
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35:02 | alert, you're now ready to respond what's going to happen. Particular activating |
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35:09 | . Yeah. Well, so, the, the process of waking, |
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35:15 | called the sleep wake cycle. All , Yeah, yeah. You're kind |
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35:19 | doing what you're doing is there's different there there's there's a bunch of sleep |
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35:24 | and there's a bunch of awake There's actually two different types of sleep |
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35:27 | . And what they're doing is they're fighting each other. And so you're |
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35:32 | to stay awake because there's something you're to accomplish or your brain is like |
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35:37 | worst is, and I'm just thinking this where you're falling asleep and you |
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35:42 | open your eyes, You know that ? Yeah, it's that one. |
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35:47 | man, that's my least favorite. anyway, so those the wake the |
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35:50 | nuclear and the sleep nuclear are fighting other desperately trying to, you |
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35:55 | one is trying to make you go sleep, one is trying to make |
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35:57 | stay awake and you're trying to stay because you have some task? |
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36:05 | Oh, we're gonna get right to in just a second. Yeah. |
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36:16 | . I don't know what the reason rationale behind sleepwalking is. We used |
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36:21 | talk about the sleep wake cycle here I just don't want to spend Expend |
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36:25 | on that. There's four stages to . Sleepwalking takes place during stage four |
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36:30 | is like the deepest, right? so you're you're Your brain is most |
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36:35 | or where like level one, that's you're going into sleep and when you're |
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36:39 | of coming out, that's your dream , that's why it's like oh you |
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36:42 | you're you become aware of things but sleepwalking is when those parts of the |
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36:47 | are shut down. And it's it's tends you have your most movement in |
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36:53 | four but I don't know anything about now. In terms of sleep |
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36:57 | sleep apnea is basically your body's saying I'm dying, I need to wake |
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37:01 | , I need to you know, myself and get out of that. |
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37:04 | it's probably a an emergency response. don't know if it's coming through the |
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37:08 | this system but maybe so I mean talking respirations in there but I don't |
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37:13 | the answer to that, you know that's just a guess. All |
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37:19 | Cranial nerves. Yes. Yes. so when your brain, so I'm |
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37:31 | to clear it if your brain doesn't down it's still very much alert but |
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37:35 | not cognizant alertness, in other it's not that frontal lobe, I'm |
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37:40 | of my surroundings. I'm not thinking stuff. I mean there's probably an |
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37:45 | but it's not that conscious awareness I about dreaming, right? You're |
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37:49 | you're like oh this is really, , there's my friend from high school |
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37:53 | it's absolutely perfectly normal and then they into a rabbit and then they like |
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37:57 | the house and you know, you're well yeah, okay, that kind |
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38:01 | makes sense, right? You So there's a part of your brain |
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38:05 | deals with that that cognitive awareness and there's there's parts of your brain that |
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38:13 | supposed to sit there and kind of at the rational nature of things. |
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38:17 | if you look at something it's like do I make sense of this? |
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38:21 | . So if you see a picture kind of looks like a face, |
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38:25 | see if I can do this. . Alright. You ever seen a |
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38:30 | that has this structure in it? like a toaster oven. Right. |
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38:35 | . You see the toaster oven? . But what we're gonna do is |
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38:38 | gonna go ahead and do that. do we have face? We anthropomorphize |
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38:47 | little structure. Why? Because when brains have been trained, see when |
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38:53 | see this and those two things that's face, right? So it's very |
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38:58 | to anthropomorphize stuff long time ago they pictures of mars and on mars they |
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39:05 | this rock from the pictures right? the rock was like kind of like |
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39:10 | and they had the shadow like on side and then had this interesting shadow |
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39:15 | this. And they had an interesting like that. And I had an |
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39:19 | shadow like that. It was oh there's people on MArs aliens left |
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39:26 | big giant statue. And then you , they went back and took pictures |
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39:31 | . It was like, yeah, rock just happened to be So there's |
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39:36 | part of our brain that rationalizes and to understand the world around us based |
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39:40 | what we what should be real or normalize. But when you're sleepwalking, |
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39:45 | part of the brain is turned my mom used to say when I |
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39:49 | like four years old, I'd get and walk in. We probably all |
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39:51 | this right, We walked in and just kind of do stuff and everyone's |
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39:55 | kind of watching you. That was apparently I walked into a party once |
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39:58 | I just kind of walked around, know, smiled everyone and I left |
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40:02 | went back, went back to had no awareness that I've ever |
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40:06 | And that's an example of sleepwalking because that cognitive stuff is sound asleep. |
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40:13 | get to the cranial nerves. Everyone afraid Deathly afraid of cranial nerves don't |
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40:18 | all right spinal nerves come out of spinal cord. Cranial nerves come out |
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40:25 | the cranium. Yeah, that's how they are. They're named or |
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40:33 | right? So there's 12 of So you go one through 12 and |
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40:36 | also have actual names that tell you they do. All right. On |
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40:40 | test to answer the question, you see both. All right. So |
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40:46 | might be optic nerve, cranial nerve two, right? So what you |
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40:52 | to do is just understand what do nerves do. Alright, now they're |
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40:56 | like I said, generally named based their function. So a lot of |
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41:01 | have to do with uh special but they also have to do with |
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41:07 | that would occur in the head and . So basically touch as well as |
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41:13 | muscles, right? There's one weird that is responsible for all the viscera |
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41:19 | thorax and the abdomen. All Remember viscera means the guts. |
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41:24 | So that's like the really cool one everyone memorizes and you know, all |
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41:29 | one and all the rest of You kind of memorize once and then |
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41:32 | them away. All right, we're walk through the cranial nerve, No |
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41:36 | is the olfactory nerve. What do think it does smell? Alright. |
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41:41 | . And actually a lot of people at this thing right up here and |
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41:44 | , oh look there is cranial number one, that's not these things |
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41:49 | down the thing that looks like the on the toothbrush are the olfactory nerves |
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|
41:55 | . So cranial nerve number one is stuff down here. They're attached to |
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42:01 | olfactory bulb when you look at this , see how they point. And |
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42:06 | like you're looking at the thing that like the toothbrush. But really what |
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42:09 | doing is trying to point out the on the toothbrush coming out at you |
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|
42:15 | ? The hardest part about olfactory or olfactory nerve. Number two is the |
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42:19 | nerve. It's responsible for vision. three. Ocular motor. It tells |
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42:24 | in the name, what does it ? It moves the eye. It |
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42:27 | has its deal with the extrinsic eye . So your eye has muscles on |
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42:34 | outside attached to it. Those are extrinsic muscles, the muscles that are |
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42:38 | the eye that control the lens, ? Those are the intrinsic eye |
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42:45 | the muscles that control the pupil intrinsic muscles. Alright, so extrinsic means |
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42:51 | the eye. It also has a in the autonomic. It is responsible |
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|
42:55 | the sphincter of the pupil. So one that makes it um smaller. |
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|
43:04 | right. So this is just trying show you the extrinsic muscles. The |
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43:07 | clear nerves is just one. You to memorize. It is responsible for |
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|
43:12 | one muscle on the eye on the of the eye. It allows you |
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43:16 | look down and laterally. So when see that cockroach running across the |
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43:20 | the mouse running across the floor and look down and I don't want to |
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43:23 | with that. It's that's looking down on the outside. That would be |
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43:28 | trow clear. That's cranial nerve number . So well. Factory, right |
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|
43:36 | . I movement. Eye movement. nerve number five. That is the |
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43:43 | it's this big fat nerve that sits there and it creates three branches hence |
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|
43:48 | gemini. The triplets. Alright century of the face muscles for shooting or |
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|
43:55 | fibers. The face of detecting of face muscles for chilling. Here's another |
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|
44:02 | one. The abdu since what its is is it abducts the eye. |
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|
44:09 | does just one muscle. My daughter not have this cranial nerve in one |
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|
44:15 | her eyes. It was just call birth defect. That's an easy way |
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|
44:19 | say it right? So if I her to look this way, both |
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44:22 | go this way, but I could her look that way when I stops |
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|
44:26 | . The other eye goes this right facial nerve that innovates the muscles |
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|
44:34 | the face all over the place and it does, it allows you to |
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44:37 | your facial expressions also innovates the salivary as well as the tear gland gland |
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|
44:46 | nerve, number seven, vestibular Now this is a compound word that |
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|
44:53 | with the structures of the ears we in our ears a thing for the |
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|
44:59 | for hearing. And we have the apparatus which is responsible for our |
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|
45:05 | All right. And it forms two the vestibular nerve and the cochlear nerve |
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|
45:09 | that's going to join up and form vestibular cochlear nerve. So basically the |
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|
45:14 | that innovates the ear and allows you hear and deals with balance on that |
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|
45:21 | . Yeah. Is that a problem the, you know? I don't |
|
|
45:28 | . That's a good question. I'm guess it has to do with the |
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|
45:33 | but I don't know. I don't . Create another number nine gloss. |
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|
45:39 | for NGO glossy is your tongue? pharynx is the fancy word for your |
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|
45:48 | . Alright. So it's the tongue throat nerve. Alright, so this |
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|
45:55 | going to govern the sense of taste a sensory input. It's gonna deal |
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|
46:01 | one for angel muscle. What do think the fringe all muscles would be |
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|
46:07 | swallowing right? Also salivary glands. vagus nerve. That's cranial nerve number |
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|
46:19 | . It innovates your viscera. So get to when we talk about all |
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|
46:26 | structures along the heart digestive system, that fun stuff. That's the vagus |
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|
46:39 | , Create a nerve number 11. think it's easier for women to learn |
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|
46:43 | one when you go in buy earrings necklaces and other things. What do |
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|
46:47 | call those? And it deals with muscles of the net. So necklace |
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|
46:59 | guys don't have accessories. So and finally we have the hipAA glass |
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|
47:04 | The hipaa Glass cell is the below tongue nerve. HipAA. Right? |
|
|
47:10 | this is dealing with both the intrinsic the extrinsic tongue muscles. Alright. |
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|
47:15 | they sit underneath the tongue and allow to do things like. Right. |
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|
47:22 | . So the thing is we see nerves and we get this sense that |
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|
47:26 | are these weird special nerves and they're right there. Just nerves that innovate |
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|
47:31 | head and the neck region, spinal innovate everything else. Right? So |
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|
47:37 | you're dividing your body up into these regions. And you're just saying, |
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|
47:41 | do these nerves come from? They from the cranial region. And then |
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|
47:48 | just name them for what they So like I said on the |
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|
47:52 | what I will do, I'll just here's something like you know what is |
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|
47:57 | nerve that innovates the tongue? And give you a list of the |
|
|
48:01 | And I'll also give you the number over time. You get to memorize |
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|
48:07 | learn those things. All right. , I don't think it's important to |
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|
48:11 | Which one is cranial nerve number That seems like a real kindergarten type |
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|
48:17 | question. I don't I don't like type of stuff. All right. |
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|
48:24 | bellum. This is your little So if your room is your big |
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48:29 | , your cerebellum is your little It is the second largest structure accounts |
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48:33 | about 11% of the total brain. we said that it connects via the |
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48:38 | . But there are connections that go to the medulla. There are connections |
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48:41 | go up to the midbrain but primarily the ponds. We had those paid |
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48:47 | . Right. And so it kind shows you um where those fibers are |
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48:52 | of going to structurally. We have nomenclature that we use here. So |
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48:59 | can see it has folds to Right? You can see there the |
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49:03 | . So instead of calling them circuses viruses, I rise the properties and |
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49:10 | is the correct one. We're going call the folds folio. Now, |
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49:16 | to means leaves, right? Leaves on a tree. Okay. The |
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49:24 | matter which you can see here, kind of goes off are like |
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49:30 | Right? And so they named the matter the arbor vitae. What does |
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49:36 | vitae mean arbor is tree life. is the tree of life. All |
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49:51 | . Now there are three different areas generally speaking, when we talk about |
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49:56 | cerebellum, we say that the cerebellum kind of like, well, it's |
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50:02 | for the planning of movement for the part, right? It doesn't actually |
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50:07 | skeletal muscle and tell the skeletal muscle to do. Really, what happens |
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50:11 | the cerebrum says, this is what want to do. I've come up |
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50:14 | a plan. I want you to out if this plan works. And |
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50:18 | the cerebellum is is the processor. the one that deals with what is |
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50:23 | mechanisms that we're going to do in to create that movement. So when |
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50:26 | say, do you know piece of . I want to go over and |
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50:29 | over to a piece of cake. brain says this is the plan to |
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50:32 | the walking and it says this is you should do. And then the |
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50:36 | says, okay let me calculate and all the calculations. And so this |
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50:39 | what you should be doing, does in real time? Very, very |
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50:43 | , there's some other systems that are here but this is what allows you |
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50:46 | start moving your body. Alright. it's like and I know this this |
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50:51 | is not gonna land on everybody, if you know anything about computers, |
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50:56 | have something that's called a CPU. the central processing unit. And about |
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51:01 | the mid-80s they realize, you we need another processor to deal with |
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51:07 | . And so they put the they took the graphics off the CPU |
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51:11 | they moved it onto a separate chip they call that the GPU. That's |
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51:15 | graphics chip. Alright, so looks I'm losing a lot of people here |
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51:20 | the Gpu got more and more powerful all it does calculate vectors so that |
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51:26 | can draw these really, really interesting which is why video games became more |
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51:30 | more realistic because you got more and powerful graphics cards and they can do |
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51:34 | calculations and computations independent of what the does. It's like we're just gonna |
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51:39 | gonna we're gonna outsource the graphics, what the cerebellum is. It's basically |
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51:45 | , there's a lot of calculations that been, we're just gonna go ahead |
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51:47 | outsource that. So outsourcing the planning of the actual movement. Okay, |
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51:55 | what it's doing now. Having said that it deals primarily with the processing |
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52:01 | and and figuring out movement. This the thing we don't write down. |
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52:05 | right, this is something that's gonna up in the future so that you |
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52:08 | , oh yeah, I remember dr told me that right, there's a |
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52:12 | out in Arkansas that likes to play the MRI machines at night, |
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52:17 | Because during the day you do it patients but at night, you know |
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52:20 | docs and professors get to play on machines, the big million dollar machines |
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52:24 | they want to ask the question what the cerebellum do? So they shove |
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52:28 | themselves into the machines and go ahead program and they say all right, |
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52:32 | play piano underneath the MRI and see our brains look like. Let's see |
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52:36 | this looks like. You know, counting cards, whatever it is and |
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52:41 | they found that the cerebellum doesn't just a role in planning movement. It |
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52:47 | plans plans, in other words, you're thinking and processing and making |
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52:55 | It's doing all the calculations like risk and stuff like that and sending it |
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53:00 | and saying this is the plan in to accomplish his goal, this is |
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53:04 | you need to do kind of. . So it's actually a much more |
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53:08 | thing, but for our purposes it a role in planning movements. |
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53:15 | good. Alright, so you can here this is what it looks |
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53:19 | You can see there's these three different , the color coded and what happens |
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53:23 | you spread it out and stretched you can kind of see how these |
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53:26 | different areas kind of look. So we have here, we have the |
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53:31 | , yellow nodule, earlobe. so it's the one that plays a |
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53:35 | in controlling your balance and your eye . All right. The idea that |
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53:40 | eyes move and I don't fall over stuff. All right, at least |
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53:48 | the region between the two hemispheres is the central verma's It actually has a |
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53:53 | . It plays a role in it plays a role in locomotion by |
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53:57 | coordination, so on and so Right? So the idea here is |
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54:02 | I move, I'm moving as if has been planned out, right? |
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54:07 | idea that my movement is smooth and doing stuff because the plan has come |
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54:13 | . That's what that's doing. Its that instead of me jerking around and |
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54:18 | weird stuff, the two hemispheres, right, are going to be involved |
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54:25 | that planning process as well as learning movements. Give me an example of |
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54:30 | complex movement. Dance. There you . That's what I was thinking |
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54:37 | It's a complex movement, right? is not a complex movement. Walking |
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54:42 | repetitive action. All I gotta do my foot, put my weight |
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54:46 | catch myself before I fall on the , rinse repeat. All right, |
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54:52 | you can see here in a very sense, what we're doing is we're |
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54:56 | our movement, making sure that it's and you know, flows well and |
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55:03 | is doing this in real time and sure everything is going according to |
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55:08 | Give you an example of according to ever been walking across the street and |
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55:13 | one of the Houston sidewalks comes grabs your foot, right? And |
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55:20 | do this whole thing because you're on phone, right? You're always on |
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55:23 | phone and you get that and you and you, instead of falling on |
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55:27 | face, you cut yourself and you can look around and see if anyone |
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55:31 | anything. But I'm still cool. right. What you did there, |
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55:35 | you saw was your cerebellum going, , here's the plan. You're executing |
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55:40 | plan, executing the plan. Oh goodness ! Things have changed. We |
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55:45 | to come on the new plan. real time. Mm Right. And |
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55:50 | instead of falling on your face, yourself before you fall on your |
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55:53 | put your foot out and that's what does. All right, now keep |
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55:57 | motion going. There you go, bell. All right. Diane, |
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56:07 | . Diane cephalon has a bunch of noticed the prefix or sorry, the |
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56:13 | and all these. It's all So the thalamus is kind of our |
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56:17 | thing that we're gonna be looking at then everything is relative to that. |
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56:20 | the sub thalamus sits underneath the the hypothalamus is further down and then |
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56:25 | epithelium asses over on the top and really isn't. It kind of sits |
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56:28 | here off to the side but that's it refers to. Alright, so |
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56:34 | four structures in here and generally speaking dyin cephalon so you can see here's |
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56:40 | brain stem, right? This is you couldn't see in the pictures before |
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56:43 | sits on top of the brain it's like the ice cream on top |
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56:48 | the cone. All right, the of these structures is to serve as |
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56:54 | relay station between the sensory and the pathways as well as controlling your visceral |
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57:05 | . The thalamus is the largest part the way to think about the thalamus |
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57:10 | almost every signal that comes into your passes through the thalamus. There are |
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57:15 | exceptions to that rule, right? that information is then going to be |
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57:20 | to the right part of the brain process that information. So it needs |
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57:25 | know where things go now, what means. Is that thalamus kind of |
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57:29 | like a post office, right? receives a signal that knows where that |
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57:33 | needs to go. And so it is a sorter. So I think |
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57:36 | the thalamus, it's kind of like it's sorting where information goes now, |
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57:41 | not actually sorting information, it's just as its central location. It's a |
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57:45 | primitive part of the brain and it us that sense of awareness of what |
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57:50 | around us. So you've heard who , have you heard of rene |
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57:54 | You know who he is? Right the I don't know, no uh |
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58:03 | think therefore I am, that's he's he's a philosopher. I know this |
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58:07 | I watch lots and lots of mighty alright. There is called the philosopher's |
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58:12 | and it's hilarious. It's a bunch how the philosophers all a bunch of |
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58:16 | boozers. But anyway, but so Day Card he comes up with |
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58:22 | idea I think right? Therefore I , that refers to your frontal lobe |
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58:27 | that's your thinking part, that's your aware of self, that's how I |
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58:32 | that I am right. The thalamus not that it just is I |
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58:39 | it has this crude awareness of of surroundings where you can look around this |
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58:43 | and this room is bright and there people in here, the thalamus would |
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58:49 | there's light alright, it wouldn't understand concept of bright versus dark, it |
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58:54 | understand light versus no light, If something was touching it, I'm |
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58:58 | touched or I'm not being touched. that crude awareness, okay, not |
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59:03 | being touched by something soft or something or something painful. It's I'm just |
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59:09 | . Okay so that's part of the . It actually has this crude awareness |
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59:15 | within it there's these different regions alright and you can see it's actually it |
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59:20 | these two hemispheres so just like your has two parts to it. And |
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59:24 | within these are these nuclei. And what I want to point out are |
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59:28 | first the three gen equivalent nuclei. so just refers to a region. |
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59:33 | we have the medial one. Mediagenic nucleus is responsible for auditory information. |
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59:40 | when you hear things it goes there before it goes on to the temporal |
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59:47 | . The lateral genic Hewlett nucleus deals visual input. So information from the |
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59:53 | goes first to the thalamus through the genic Hewlett nucleus then on to the |
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59:59 | cortex. And then lastly we have ventral nucleus which deals with all the |
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60:03 | senses because you know they're so important yeah those two. Alright so three |
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60:09 | lateral and ventral. We also have couple of other nuclei eyes. There's |
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60:15 | ventral anterior ventral lateral nuclei. Alright what they do is they play a |
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60:22 | in motor function. Now why do point this out because we're gonna talk |
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60:26 | motor function in the next unit. and we're gonna see that it's not |
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60:31 | the frontal lobe it's not just the , it's also the thalamus and also |
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60:36 | basil ganglia play a role in The last one are the interior medial |
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60:42 | . They play a role in Alright, so this idea of, |
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60:48 | I'm experiencing something, you know? it causes me to be happy or |
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60:53 | or angry or whatever. All so it's connecting the prefrontal cortex and |
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60:59 | limbic system, which we're gonna talk at the very end of class and |
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61:03 | allowing us to process and understand our to our environment and our experiences. |
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61:11 | gonna pause there and then we will back after in about five minutes, |
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61:15 | minutes. Sound good and then we finish up. Let's get going. |
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61:21 | , so the thalamus um and this you know, kind of a just |
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61:26 | of an area that is responsible for control. All right. It's gonna |
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61:31 | information what they call the basal Um It's basically where tracks are gonna |
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61:37 | moving in and out. So when talk about movement, it's going to |
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61:40 | part of the that those complexes that responsible for movement. All right, |
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61:46 | this is we're gonna be parts of substantia nigra. This is what I'm |
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61:49 | for. The substantia nigra as well the red nuclear part of this |
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61:56 | So you can kind of see that of extend upward epidural thomas. |
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62:01 | The most interesting part is the pineal , but the Hammond Hammond Mueller nuclei |
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62:07 | there as well. So again, you hear that word nuclei, what |
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62:10 | the nuclear, I mean what does nucleus mean? It means an area |
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62:13 | you have a bunch of cell bodies processing is taking place. Right? |
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62:18 | here the nuclei that are located in area that are responsible for visceral and |
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62:23 | responses to odor. Alright, When smell something that makes you happy, |
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62:29 | you learnt nuclei when you smell something you get repulsed, right, have |
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62:36 | nuclei. So it's playing a role attaching smell and emotion together the pineal |
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62:43 | . This is one that you're more more familiar with, more interested |
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62:45 | It's the one that secretes melatonin melatonin an important role in regulating the circadian |
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62:51 | of your life. It's not the molecule, it's one of the hormones |
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62:55 | regulates it. And so you can about in terms of regulating puberty, |
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62:58 | sleep wake cycle, which we're most with it, your biological clock. |
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63:02 | idea of like it's time to do or Y in my life, |
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63:06 | And I'm not talking about just having . I mean, they're like, |
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63:09 | need to grow up, right? now I'm now an adult and actually |
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63:14 | of that conversion. That period of of going from child to adult is |
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63:20 | idea of like I'm learning my I'm regulated. So Peniel glenn that |
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63:24 | a role in that. All The hypothalamus is like the big |
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63:30 | Alright, so thalamus plays a major in in in sorting information. The |
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63:35 | when we think about it is really we call the master hormone structure. |
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63:42 | regulates so many different things, primarily with questions of homeostasis of the |
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63:47 | All right. It controls your viscera in incredible ways now of interest. |
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63:54 | you're looking at it, you can right there. Um There's these two |
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64:00 | , right? There's a bump right . It's actually right there. Not |
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64:03 | , but that one right there. the mammal, everybody. All |
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64:06 | And basically these bulges basically serve as as a area where we're going to |
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64:12 | , do those reflexes with emotions. is it sub is it hype |
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64:17 | you know, that's fine, But the mammalian bodies are easy to |
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64:21 | in terms of anatomical structure. The Dibble. Um Is this stock like |
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64:26 | ? So I'm just gonna put my over so that little portion above my |
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64:31 | right there. That's the infant Um And these are neurons that are |
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64:35 | down to the next structure called the gland, which is that structure right |
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64:40 | . Pituitary gland is responsible for releasing and lots of hormones in your body |
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64:45 | actually six different hormones that are being through there. Alright. And it's |
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64:51 | through the hypothalamus. So here you see there's the pituitary gland there's the |
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64:55 | lem. Um I guess I got wrong. That's the optic eye |
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64:59 | So the mammalian bodies would be Alright anyway, jelly beans. You |
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65:04 | not need to know the jelly Okay. The different color. These |
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65:08 | just showing you like there's all sorts different nuclei that are found in the |
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65:12 | . They play multiple roles in all of different things. So for example |
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65:17 | super uh super optic nuclei and the want to snow pair of ventricular |
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65:28 | Those two, for example, are for producing the same two hormones that |
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65:34 | released from the pituitary gland. And specifically in the post, you |
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65:39 | need to know that I'm just trying show you. So there's different regions |
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65:42 | are responsible for could be similar things different things. And this is kind |
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65:46 | the big list, right? I you can kind of see it's the |
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65:50 | control center, there's that word controlling things that I have no conscious |
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65:55 | over emotional response. Body temperature. ? You do know your body temperature |
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66:01 | over the course of the day and when you go to sleep, your |
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66:04 | temperature goes back down again. And as really the thing that when you |
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66:09 | up is your body temperature starts That's actually one of the things. |
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66:13 | it's being regular by the hypothalamus. you're hungry, when you're thirsty, |
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66:19 | , when you wake up and go sleep but dr wayne. You just |
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66:21 | me a particular activating system, but it's going to be regulations to |
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66:26 | hypothalamus that's going to have influence on particular activating system. Right? When |
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66:30 | sitting there going I need to fall . For example control of the endocrine |
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66:36 | which are all those hormones. So there's all these different things. |
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66:41 | you think of homeostasis, think hypothalamus probably regulated through the hypothalamus nine times |
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66:47 | of 10 hypothalamus. Now we're going come in and we're gonna dive deeper |
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66:55 | structures of the cerebrum. Okay, Abram responsible for the conscious mind back |
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67:03 | Renee Take art I think therefore I okay. It is that awareness of |
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67:09 | awareness of your surroundings. So we're about thoughts sensory perception as well as |
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67:15 | . So, when you think of of these things, your intelligence, |
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67:18 | reasoning, your judgment, your motor , visual activities, auditory activities, |
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67:23 | of these things are being done at level of the cerebrum. All |
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67:28 | The very fact that you can understand I'm saying. See what I'm |
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67:32 | listening to me, seeing me where your seat is uncomfortable, that you're |
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67:36 | of listening to me that is your . So we cut through the cerebral |
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67:43 | and what we're gonna do is we're focus now on the gray matter. |
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67:46 | what we call the white matter? a bunch of tracks that are traveling |
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67:49 | either the different hemispheres or different parts the brain or down to the spinal |
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67:55 | . We want to focus on the matter. The cortex refers to the |
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67:58 | matter that is found on the All right. You can see that |
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68:03 | have two different hemispheres. So we gray matter on either side of |
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68:06 | And in fact there's actual layers within . There's six different layers. And |
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68:10 | on where you are, those layers gonna differ. Right? So, |
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68:14 | making stuff up because I'm not interested learning layers. But like layer one |
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68:18 | the front low might be thin, layer one in the occipital lobe might |
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68:21 | thick. Right? But there's always layers. Right? So this is |
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68:28 | all that complex processing takes place is the cortex. Right? So here |
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68:35 | can see the two hemispheres, And they're just trying to show you |
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68:38 | lows by color. Here's that longitudinal . So, you can separate those |
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68:42 | out. The fishers are the two . If you look at them, |
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68:46 | not mirror images of each other. right. They are concerned with the |
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68:52 | side of the body for the most . So, you moving your right |
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68:55 | is work that's being done on your side of your brain. All |
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68:59 | Remember how we talked about the And we said there's crossing over |
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69:03 | That's why is because the fibers cross at that point. All right. |
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69:09 | even though that these two sides are necessarily the same. They don't necessarily |
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69:13 | the same things. There is a of activity that goes back and forth |
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69:18 | between those two hemispheres. Alright, there may be shared activity on either |
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69:24 | , but you may see one side harder than the other and vice |
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69:27 | There's been lots of really interesting experiments where they actually cut the two hemispheres |
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69:33 | and they can act independently of each and be completely unaware of each other |
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69:37 | what they're doing. It's it's kind weird. We'll get to that in |
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69:45 | second. It's called lateralization And I it's like four slides away. That's |
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69:49 | good question and I don't want to it. So, if I don't |
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69:51 | your question well, we'll we'll get it. That's a good question. |
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69:56 | . Alright. So what I want do is I want to narrow in |
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69:58 | there's three basic types of areas you're to see in the cerebrum We have |
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70:04 | areas. Motor areas are responsible for , right? Sensory areas are responsible |
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70:09 | processing sensory input and then we have areas where you're going to integrate |
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70:15 | like censoring input and then determine what to be happening so that you can |
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70:19 | some sort of motor output. so does that kind of makes |
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70:23 | Information comes in, is sensory I to process that and then once I |
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70:28 | out what needs to be done, can take different sources of sources of |
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70:34 | , combine it together and come up some sort of solution. Then tell |
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70:38 | motor areas what to do. All , and then that information then relayed |
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70:44 | . So I want to start on motor area. I want you to |
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70:46 | at this picture very closely, look the boxes, each of these |
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70:52 | You see something that stands out between boxes. Only one of them has |
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71:00 | in it. So the motor areas no note where all the motor areas |
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71:05 | . They're in one area, they're the frontal lobe. You don't have |
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71:09 | areas in the insulin, you don't motor areas in the temporal lobe. |
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71:11 | don't have motor areas in the occipital . You don't have motor areas over |
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71:14 | in the parietal lobe. The only that motor areas are located in the |
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71:18 | lobe. The first primary motor area need to understand. It's called the |
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71:24 | motor cortex. It's called M. . That's the abbreviation for it. |
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71:28 | , M. One is here in pre central gyrus right there. The |
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71:33 | area. Alright. Its job is deal with voluntary movement. Right? |
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71:39 | skeletal muscles, we have another area here. It's called Broca's area. |
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71:47 | many guys speak spanish fluently or even fluently but just like barely got 11 |
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71:52 | . What is the word for mouth . Alright, boca? His |
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71:58 | Where do sounds come from? Your ? All right Broca's area governs the |
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72:06 | of the mouth so that you can sound. That's how I remember |
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72:12 | Okay. It controls the muscles of . It does not control the actual |
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72:17 | itself but meme making sounds that sound words. That is Broca's area. |
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72:23 | right. We also have superior to area. We have the super or |
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72:27 | front I. Field. Alright, controls the voluntary movement of eyes. |
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72:32 | look at me straight eyes on me look up at the ceiling without moving |
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72:34 | head, look down the floor with left light, right? Yeah, |
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72:38 | the frontal eye field. Okay. movement of those extrinsic eye muscles and |
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72:44 | your eyes to move around is done the front I. Field This picture |
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72:51 | here shows you that primary motor cortex M one in the pre central gyrus |
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72:56 | what you can see as you can it's organization here. What this is |
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72:59 | is called a homunculus. Alright now probably heard the word homunculus before. |
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73:04 | just basically refers to something that's human right if you watch Full Metal alchemist |
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73:09 | I know some of you see I I've got some geeks in here who |
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73:12 | seen it before. Alright, Homunculus a term that they used over and |
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73:17 | again. It's a human like this is that homunculus and you can |
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73:22 | does this kind of look like a , There's your trunk and your hands |
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73:25 | your feet and there's your face and your other structures. All the parts |
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73:30 | the human are there. They're just in the right place where you expect |
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73:33 | to be, but what this is really a map showing you where those |
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73:38 | are going to be regulated. So bigger the structure, Right? So |
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73:43 | can see right here, my hand really, really big because there's a |
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73:47 | of stuff that's being regulated through the . Right? Or through the brain |
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73:51 | govern your hand. And what kind movement do we have in our |
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73:53 | Fine. Of course, fine. you have to do a lot of |
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73:58 | calculations to make your fingers do all fun movement. Right? So your |
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74:02 | dedicates a lot of space to right? You know, moving my |
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74:08 | . Probably not so much. That sense. Look at your tongue, |
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74:15 | ? Because we gotta waggle around a . Actually, why would our time |
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74:20 | so governed? What do we use tongue for? Besides eating and |
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74:24 | Please? Speech That's right. That's we're looking for, speech Right? |
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74:29 | keeping the class clean. Right? , So it's speech speech right? |
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74:37 | if I cut off my hand, gonna happen is is that I'm no |
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74:41 | regulating the movement of my hand and I might compensate for it by doing |
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74:46 | things. And so areas that I'm using are gonna get smaller and every |
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74:50 | that need more more activity are gonna larger. So there's a certain degree |
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74:54 | plasticity that does occur in the All right. Um mm Yes. |
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75:01 | we'll deal with that in a Okay. Maybe if I don't answer |
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75:05 | question we'll come to it. So got to cut two questions kind of |
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75:08 | the queue. Right lateralization, phantom . All right now look at the |
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75:13 | areas, look at the little picture here, look at the little boxes |
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75:17 | the sensor areas everywhere else. Do have any in the frontal lobe? |
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75:22 | . All right. So you can processing of sensory input is done in |
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75:26 | the other loaves. So I'm just kind of walk around the corners. |
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75:29 | start here, parietal lobe. That's you're gonna see the primary somatosensory |
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75:32 | That's the sense of touch. The primary notice something keeps using the |
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75:37 | primary that means this is the first . Doesn't mean it's the only |
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75:42 | Right? So there are Secondary and and so on and so forth areas |
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75:46 | like I said with visual there's like of them. Right? So in |
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75:49 | occipital of this is v one that's to be in the occipital primary visual |
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75:56 | as visual input. All right, around the end temporal lobe we're going |
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76:00 | see the primary auditory cortex. We're going to be the primary olfactory cortex |
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76:05 | of sound processing of taste or it's Excuse me. Olfaction smell and then |
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76:11 | in the in slow way down on inside. That's where the sense of |
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76:14 | is going to be processed. that's the primary gustatory cortex, focusing |
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76:22 | the sense of touch. Alright. of touch. You can see again |
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76:25 | is gonna be that post central You can see again the homunculus and |
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76:31 | it's so Samantha topically organized again. can see what things are important in |
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76:38 | of receiving information. So why do think the lips are so important |
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76:44 | The answer would be oh it's right? It's not kissing. I |
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76:47 | I was kissing. I wish that the answer. It's much more fun |
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76:50 | teach the class, right? But answer is that I think about what |
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76:54 | the things that you put in your ? Right? These are things that |
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76:57 | possibly cause damage to your body. would never ever drink at Starbucks you |
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77:03 | right, right off the off the , Right where they give it to |
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77:07 | , it's like 350°. It's like And the and the and the barista |
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77:13 | of looks at you and smiles like can't wait till you drink this |
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77:18 | The first thing that's gonna touch of lip, your and your tongue and |
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77:21 | gonna be like whoa, I'm not that in my body, I'm gonna |
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77:24 | that sit out for three hours, ? All the dangerous things that can |
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77:29 | your body are going to first come your lips, That's why they're so |
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77:36 | . Ever eaten a dorito the wrong . Yeah. Right. But you |
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77:41 | just see it's again where do we stuff? Mostly lips and in terms |
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77:46 | our hands. All right. I'm answer your question now even though the |
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77:54 | really comes in the next unit. . The question was what about phantom |
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77:59 | ? Alright, phantom limb is basically remove a limb right? And you |
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78:05 | feel the sensation of whatever was And the reason for that is because |
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78:10 | fibers still are still originating from the right? And they go down to |
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78:17 | place where that limb was lost. the touch receptors, what we've done |
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78:21 | is we haven't lost the actual nerve . The nerve fibers are there. |
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78:25 | just innovating here but they're going directly the somatosensory cortex. They're not Remapped |
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78:31 | map to where the fingers should And so when you stimulate that nerve |
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78:37 | the brain says oh because of the I'm organized. That must mean it's |
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78:42 | from here right? By stimulate So that's really what that phantom limb |
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78:48 | . It's it's simply the stimulation of fiber that used to innovate the structure |
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78:54 | was lost. And so it's perceived being still there. See? No |
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79:06 | heard that but yeah, I don't how that works. So but I've |
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79:10 | of that. Right. Yes. Berkus Yeah yeah. If you're interested |
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79:19 | Euro stuff take his class he's he's he's the man that when you deal |
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79:24 | when you when you deal with the tissue, yeah, generate all the |
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79:31 | like this. Let's see. So , it's gonna it's gonna always, |
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79:35 | parts of your brain are gonna show of plasticity, but with regard to |
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79:39 | movement, if you're not actually moving right, there's nothing to move, |
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79:44 | you're going to see that degeneracy. probably something that's more familiar in terms |
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79:47 | touch. If you still have those , you know, you're gonna just |
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79:51 | it differently, but you're not gonna the area because you're still getting |
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79:55 | I suppose if you lost the the itself, then it probably show more |
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80:02 | . That's a guess he has Yes. Right? That's true, |
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80:13 | ? And again, that's that plasticity dealing with the networks and how those |
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80:17 | actually talk to each other. That is the most irritating noise, |
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80:23 | . Alright. You've probably heard or at one point in your life that |
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80:28 | right brained or left brained, Oh, I can't learn that |
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80:31 | I'm right brained. Oh, I learn that. I'm better at |
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80:36 | That's not how lateralization actually works. . Now we said the two hemispheres |
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80:41 | nearly identical, but there are some . For example, that Broca's area |
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80:45 | always gonna be found on make sure get this right? The left side |
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80:50 | the brain, just making sure That's the left side of the |
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80:54 | Alright. So brokers and we're naked we're necklaces where speech is done. |
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80:58 | right? So it's always over it's never well if it's on the |
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81:04 | side, you probably are a mirror of yourself, but you're not going |
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81:07 | have a brokers and brokers. It's only on one side. So this |
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81:11 | an example of that sort of Alright. And so there have been |
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81:16 | things have been mapped to the different . So in other words, when |
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81:19 | hear language sounds uh that will be in the left hemisphere, whereas for |
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81:24 | , non language sounds would be processed the right hemisphere. But are you |
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81:29 | sounds only on one side of the ? No, it's being processed on |
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81:32 | side of the brain. It's just type of sound is being processed. |
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81:36 | right. Now, lateralization correlates highly handedness. Alright. We got a |
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81:41 | of people who are right handed in right, right hands. Alright? |
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81:46 | of being sinister, Right? That's , that's where that that's where it |
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81:51 | from, sinister is left handed, ? So right handed people, you |
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81:56 | have Broca's area and Warnecke sitting on left side of your of your |
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82:00 | right? If you are sinister or handed, you probably have Broca's on |
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82:07 | left side of your brain but not . You could have been this is |
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82:13 | weird one, You could have been twin an identical twin very early on |
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82:18 | development that lost the twin during um genesis, right? And you can |
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82:25 | a mirror image now. The way know, you're a mirror image is |
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82:28 | when they go do an X ray your heart's backward and everything else is |
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82:31 | , all the organs are backwards. like you're a mirror image of |
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82:34 | So there's some left handed people who not twins, who are mirror images |
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82:39 | the twin that didn't get past, the 16 or 18 cell stage, |
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82:45 | is flipped around. It's a mirror . Yeah. So if you ever |
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82:49 | an X ray, if you know you get an X ray, they |
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82:51 | and they put that little thing that left side or right side or something |
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82:54 | that. The reason they have to that is because it was like, |
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82:58 | there are people who are backwards on inside, so instead of your heart |
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83:04 | down this way pointing down that Yeah, so it's just a mirror |
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83:11 | . All right, So the left , what we say is the speech |
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83:16 | , which means that's where Broca's area , right? It doesn't mean that |
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83:20 | good at english classes and bad at classes. Alright, so this is |
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83:26 | of that breakdown, it has to with spatial ability and all these different |
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83:30 | but we're good at all those I know it's lateralization just isn't how |
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83:36 | divide the labor up in the All right, we're coming down to |
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83:42 | wire here, we're gonna deal with couple of other structures. The basal |
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83:46 | . This is gray matter. That's to the white matter. Alright. |
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83:51 | the outside here is the cortex the that here are colored this thing right |
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83:56 | and this structure right there. That's basal nuclei. All right. So |
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84:02 | you'll see sometimes in older textbooks they them the basal ganglia. But remember |
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84:06 | we said. Ganglia are found in peripheral nervous system. So they've come |
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84:10 | and they kind of renamed them. right. These things are important in |
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84:16 | of monitoring movement. Alright. So movement has a lot of different structures |
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84:21 | are involved in this. All They typically these structures will play a |
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84:25 | in inhibiting antagonistic movement. Alright. guys all heard of Parkinson's disease? |
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84:31 | . The characteristic of Parkinson's is the . Right? You see people and |
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84:35 | have the tremor. What you're looking is failure in the basal nuclei. |
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84:40 | what I said is that you're trying create smooth movement when I go and |
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84:44 | a drink. My arm is moved there. I've got a plan, |
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84:47 | ? But I may over contract my too much to go a little bit |
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84:50 | the left. Then my body tries compensate goes over a little bit too |
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84:54 | to the right and it keeps doing back and forth but before I ever |
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84:58 | an opportunity to contract that muscle. sarah bellum says hey you're not executing |
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85:03 | plan that we talked about. So is what we want to do and |
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85:06 | it actually adjusts all the contractions and before they ever occur so that you |
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85:11 | that smooth movement. All right. you destroy the basal nuclei which are |
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85:17 | for making those small corrections before it happens, what you end up with |
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85:23 | you get the first contraction that's an , then the compensation and back and |
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85:28 | and you can now see what do have? You have a tremor. |
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85:33 | ? And so what you're looking at is you're looking at the failure to |
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85:38 | the plan by getting rid of all antagonistic movements. Alright, They don't |
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85:44 | to the motor pathways there within that that discussion between the cerebellum, the |
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85:50 | and the cerebrum. The basil nuclear in that kind of, that group |
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85:55 | together. There are lots of different in here. All right, the |
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86:00 | strategy. Autumn is referring to these that have been colored right here. |
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86:05 | these two blue colored things and this thing up here. All right, |
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86:09 | the ones that play that role in movement and decision making of movement. |
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86:13 | right. So lots of lots of to that. The caudate nucleus nucleus |
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86:19 | the green one that's sitting up over . It's responsible for the appropriate movement |
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86:24 | rhythmic movement. Alright, so think like this, you know when you |
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86:28 | walking and you create that nice cadence that nice movement. That would be |
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86:32 | caudate nucleus, Belinda form nuclei. . R2 structures we have the putem |
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86:39 | which is this big thing. And the smaller triangle portion is the Globus |
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86:44 | . Alright. Peterman, that's movement the subconscious level, the globe's |
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86:49 | that's going to be dealing with that and exciting activity to ensure that you're |
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86:54 | the right muscle tone. This little boy down here, the mongoloid body |
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87:01 | an interesting role in behavioral activity, in response to fear. But you |
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87:07 | just kind of put a big old of generic thing, emotional um um |
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87:12 | behavioral moving moodiness type stuff. And is this little tiny thin band like |
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87:18 | and you can think of this little as going around. It starts here |
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87:21 | it just kind of goes around about the back like that and it has |
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87:25 | deal with processing visual information at the level. That's still part of the |
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87:30 | nuclei. Favorite structure, limbic Now we've done we've got a whole |
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87:40 | of stuff away from what we're looking here and we're left with some cerebrum |
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87:44 | well as some other structures that are of the diane cephalon. Alright. |
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87:48 | you can see the brain stem here well. So there's your midbrain, |
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87:52 | ponds has been colored blue and here going down through the spinal cord. |
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87:56 | beige looking stuff is cerebrum. So are gyros is right? And then |
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88:02 | green stuff here you can see there's amygdala. So that's part of the |
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88:06 | nuclei. And so the limbic system all these different structures that play an |
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88:10 | role in emotion and your understanding and of emotion. Alright plays also an |
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88:18 | role in memory as well. So idea is feelings and thought, |
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88:25 | If you think of something, oh don't know think of grandma breaking your |
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88:29 | cake because we all love chocolate cake ? Everyone nod your head and say |
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88:32 | love chocolate cake. Even if you right, does thinking of grandma on |
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88:35 | chocolate cake make you happy? Okay. Now think of the test |
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88:40 | monday. Just thinking of the test , I made you laugh so there's |
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88:45 | emotion thing but does thinking about the make you sad. Yeah. |
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88:50 | So there you go. So we're about the limbic system playing a role |
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88:54 | all that. All right. So have the singular gyrus. We have |
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88:59 | pair of hippocampal gyrus which is next the hippocampus. Hippocampus is the thing |
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89:03 | looks like a horseshoe. It's kind like this shape right here that goes |
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89:07 | that. It's not necessarily the green . It's the the shape, |
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89:11 | And so what we're doing is we're with spatial memory right? It plays |
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89:16 | role in dealing with how we store away. It's taking short term memory |
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89:22 | converts in a long term memory. we already mentioned has to do with |
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89:26 | motion and primarily deals with fear, bulb, smell and memory, |
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89:32 | If you have you ever smelled like perfume or cologne of a significant other |
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89:37 | you've broken up a long time ago then all of a sudden you're like |
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89:39 | along and you just smell it and makes you think about that person. |
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89:43 | , smell and memory alright. Or ? When you smell barbecue, it |
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89:47 | reminds you of happiness and joy. . Right. The for next is |
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89:52 | two things cross or come together. this is just basically where we're connecting |
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89:57 | so that before next and then there's whole bunch of nuclei. Again, |
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90:01 | job is to help bring this information so that you're combining emotions and memory |
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90:09 | together, I can't believe I'm actually finish on time, aren't I? |
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90:14 | , I can actually slow down. , I know you guys gotta test |
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90:18 | just get through it right. We to talk a lot more about this |
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90:24 | but I just need you to understand little bit about memory. All |
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90:29 | The way that memory works, it with the plasticity of the brain remember |
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90:33 | we said the brain modifies itself. so one of the ways that it |
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90:37 | itself is basically between uh neurons. we said here we have a network |
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90:42 | cells talking to that cell, but makes a stronger connection or it separates |
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90:45 | connection and so on and so And so this is usually represented by |
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90:50 | well those two cells are talking to other. All right. And so |
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90:54 | we can do for example is if is a normal synapse, you can |
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91:00 | I am releasing a certain amount of of a certain number of receptors. |
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91:04 | this is going to create a certain as a result of that. But |
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91:08 | I can do is I can have cell when it receives that signal can |
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91:13 | back to that cell and say you what I need you to reinforce that |
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91:17 | . I want you to release more or this cell can release a signal |
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91:22 | this cell that says you know what want to reinforce this. I need |
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91:26 | to make more receptors so that we a bigger response. Alright. And |
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91:31 | this is what we talked about This is one of the ways that |
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91:35 | can do this. And the term we use to make these changes is |
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91:40 | long term, potentially ation or if trying to take away a signal long |
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91:46 | depression. All right. So long part initiation is what is being shown |
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91:51 | . It's basically saying I'm gonna do I'm gonna enhance the communication either by |
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91:56 | the amount of neurotransmitter I'm releasing or increasing the number of receptors that I |
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92:00 | or both. Right. I can any of those, any either of |
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92:03 | two things or I can do them and in doing so if I have |
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92:08 | neurotransmitter that's gonna cause a longer response a larger response. Alright, notice |
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92:15 | is not an action potential. Do see what it says over here on |
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92:17 | side, it says response, so gonna get a bigger response than I |
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92:21 | did. Right. Similarly, if added more receptors, that means I've |
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92:25 | more cells that can bind up to available neurotransmitter so I can get a |
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92:30 | response in terms of depression, let's pretend this is the normal one |
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92:35 | Right. Depression I can do what can take away neurotransmitter actually it's the |
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92:41 | amount. But you know, in in the I can take away |
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92:45 | I can take away number of receptors so it makes it harder for a |
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92:49 | to occur. So that would be depression occurs. I'm reducing the |
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92:56 | So when you learn something or when experience something, all right, you're |
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93:01 | get some sort of sensory input. you're looking at this picture right now |
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93:05 | . And I just made you focus it by looking telling you see this |
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93:08 | right now. Right. But there's visual input if you don't pay attention |
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93:13 | that, that information just goes Think about all the billboards that you |
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93:18 | today, You saw them, you up and said yeah, whatever. |
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93:20 | you just kept going right? I to get a story of that information |
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93:27 | , insignificant to what you're doing. basically information is lost. But if |
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93:31 | grabs your attention then what's going to is you're going to put that into |
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93:35 | term memory. Short term memory is short. In fact they've quantified |
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93:40 | It's like you can hold like 10 For like like two minutes time or |
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93:46 | like that. It's very, very . All right. So in order |
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93:51 | retain that information, you have to it. You have to go over |
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93:57 | . You have to repeat it over over and over again. That's what |
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94:01 | is trying to show you. Is rehearsal. So kind of the way |
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94:04 | designed the classes based on that kind idea is like this idea of like |
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94:09 | gonna keep seeing this over and over . I'm never gonna let it get |
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94:12 | of my sight. If someone is harassing me with the same information over |
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94:16 | over again, I'm never gonna forget . Right? If you don't rehearse |
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94:22 | information is lost, but what ends happening is is that it will be |
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94:29 | into the brain primarily in the frontal . So the hippocampus is playing a |
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94:35 | in telling the brain how to store information. And so as you go |
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94:39 | that repetition, as you go through that information. What's gonna happen is |
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94:43 | going to create that pattern within that . That then can be called on |
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94:49 | and over again. Typically what we is that long term memory is going |
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94:55 | be limitless in terms of its You will remember everything to the end |
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95:00 | time. It's not entirely true, it can be pretty close to |
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95:05 | Mean I still remember stupid commercials from I was seven years old. |
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95:10 | there's a Boy Scout commercial with charlie , you know that I could probably |
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95:15 | to you. I'm not gonna There are things that that you will |
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95:22 | forever and the capacity for long term Ation is limitless. There was an |
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95:27 | I'm I'm going to reveal what sort horrible person I am. I used |
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95:31 | watch Married with Children. I thought was the most hilarious show ever. |
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95:35 | right. For me, it was and the daughter in that show was |
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95:40 | characterized as being slutty and dumber than box of rocks. Alright, that's |
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95:45 | was her character, right? And an episode where she has to study |
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95:49 | some sort of exams like past high or something. I don't remember |
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95:52 | And so she found somebody to study and who would give her more |
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95:56 | but as she learned information, she forget stuff like the name of her |
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96:02 | . So the idea being is like had a limited brain capacity. You |
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96:06 | not have a limited brain capacity like Bundy. Alright. Your brain capacity |
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96:10 | limitless. As long as you keep and stuff like that, you will |
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96:15 | up doing that again. You have do some sort of retrieve retrieval on |
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96:22 | to make that possible and it's gonna stored in the cortex. All |
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96:26 | So just to let you know we're an earlier today. Yeah, you |
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96:30 | go to your test. Remember we a test on monday? I'm gonna |
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96:34 | out an email because I know that people probably not the people in here |
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96:38 | you guys actually attend. But there people who are probably sitting there |
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96:42 | I don't know if I should stay the class or not. And I'm |
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96:44 | give those people who are kind of about your grades. How you go |
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96:49 | self analyzing whether or not you stay a class or to leave the |
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96:52 | I'm not encouraging you to drop out a class. I'm not encouraging you |
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96:55 | stay in a class if you It's there's a there's a logical way |
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96:58 | go through that. So, when see that email, that's what that's |
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97:02 | . All right. I'm not talking you saying drop the class. All |
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97:06 | . So there you go, you kick butt, take names. Go |
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97:08 | fun, take your test, that of thing. Yeah. Uh |
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