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The Probert Encyclopaedia of Medicine

BRAIN

Picture of Brain

The brain is the primary component of the nervous system, occupying the cranial cavity. Without its outermost protective membrane, the dura mater, the brain weighs an average of 1.4 kilograms, comprising about 97% of the entire central nervous system. The brain is connected to the upper end of the spinal cord (which connects through the foramen magnum of the skull) and is responsible for issuing nerve impulses, processing nerve impulse data, and engaging in the higher order thought processes. The brain is divided into three parts: the large cerebrum, the smaller cerebellum, and the brainstem leading to the spinal cord. The brainstem is also descriptively divided into the medulla oblongata, the midbrain, and the pons. The right hemisphere of the brain is a part of the cerebrum. The cerebrum, or forebrain, forms the bulk of the brain, formed of a large mass of white and grey neural fiber in the upper cranium. It is responsible for the higher thought processes (memory, judgement, reason), processing sensory data, and with initiating willful motor processes, such as voluntary muscle flexion. The cerebrum is composed of two lateral halves, or hemispheres, which feature a number of folds (gyri) and furrows (sulci) and which are connected in the middle at the medulla. Containing about a trillion neurons, the human brain is the most complex mechanism known, and its many functions are still largely a mystery.
Research Brain

 
 
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