Cerebral science - studies in anatomical psychology - a book for artists, physicians and teachers (1901) (20400889000)
Zusammenfassung
Title: Cerebral science : studies in anatomical psychology : a book for artists, physicians and teachers
Identifier: cerebralsciences00wood (find matches)
Year: 1901 (1900s)
Authors: Wood, Wallace. d. 1916
Subjects: Brain; Brain; Physiology, Comparative
Publisher: London : Baillière, Tindall and Cox
Contributing Library: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons and Harvard Medical School
Text Appearing Before Image:
THE CEREBRAL SPHERE 19 SUPERIOR.
Text Appearing After Image:
INFERIOR. Fig. i.—The Cerebral Sphere. Brain of Man, Left Hemisphere, View near the Vertex, Profile. The deep perpendicular fissure running downward, like a river between its two white banks, is the Rolando; this river, with its banks, is the grand motor. Anterior to this is the lobe of the great frontal dome, plainly divided into three tiers or arches : these are the first, second, and third frontal lobes or gyri. Each of these maybe taken in three parts—anterior, mid, and posterior. The anterior part of the third is the salience, the junction of the second gyrus with the third ; the mid portion of the third is the cap; the pars posterior is the pied, or talker, the cerebrophone. The anterior part of the second or middle lobe is not visible, but the pars medius and pars posterior are distinct; the pars posterior, active, is arrow-shaped. It is the writing centre. We see here, therefore, the creative eye and the creative pen as they appear in the soul—that is, in the cerebrum. Arching above the second stage is the superior or first frontal lobe. The anterior portion is not visible in this plate. The two parts seen are the anterior metopic and posterior metopic lobules. The motor is divisible into three parts ; the superior lobule is the pes, or spirit of the foot; the middle lobule is the manus, or spirit of the arm; the inferior lobule, shaped like the lower part of a human face, is the facies, or maxilla, the spirit of the jaws—under it is seen the'line of the temporal lobe. Posterior on the plate is the terminal bulb, the occipital eye. 2—2