Brain Awareness Week 2012: Difference between revisions
(→Brain) |
|||
Line 129: | Line 129: | ||
{| | {| | ||
| [[File:Stage22 vertebra and spinal cord 1.jpg|400px]] | | [[File:Stage22 vertebra and spinal cord 1.jpg|400px]] | ||
| '''Week 8''' wall of the neural tube at the spinal cord end | | '''Week 8''' wall of the neural tube at the spinal cord end. | ||
Spinal cord lies behind the vertebral body. | |||
The "grey matter" is on the inside of the spinal cord and the outside of the brain. | |||
The "grey matter" (dark central region) is where the neurons (cell bodies) are located, the "white matter" (pale outer region) is where nerve pathways run (axons). | |||
The sensory neurons lie outside the spinal cord in the '''dorsal root ganglia'''. | |||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 05:22, 16 March 2012
Welcome to Brain Development
width=320px|height=260px|controller=false|autoplay=true</qt> | In today's demonstration we will be looking at how the brain develops from a simple tube into the complex folded structure that you will be seeing (and using) today.
This page has been prepared as a simplified introduction to human neural development. The second part of the demonstration will cover comparative anatomy of the brain. |
Here is Human Development
This graph shows how we divide human development into different times. Key events occur in the first trimester (embryonic), though the neural system continues to develop through the second and third trimester (fetal) and even after birth (postnatal). This is why it one reason why it is so susceptible to damage.
Week 3 - It begins as a Plate
Week 4 - That folds to a Tube
The tube then Closes at each End
These images show the neural tube closing leaving an opening (neuropore) at each end.
|
Week 6 to 8 - The brain end of the tube forms 3 Vesicles
width=516px|height=540px|controller=true|loop=true|autoplay=true</qt>
|
Week 6 - the brain and spinal cord of the human embryo. Also visible are the heart (bright white) and placental cord containing placental blood vessels. |
Brain
Spinal Cord
At the spinal cord end - the tube stays narrow. This region begins to put out motor nerves to innervate muscle and sensory nerves grow towards the developing spinal cord.
Week 13 onward - Fetal brain Grows
This shows the growth of the brain and the fluid-filled space within the brain (the red bar is 1 cm).
|
|
Week 40 on - Newborn brain Grows
The brain has not finished growing at birth.
Growth you can see!
Much of the growth in size after birth is due to "white matter" development, the support cells of the brain, spinal cord and nerves.
The skeleton containers of the nervous system, the skull (brain) and vertebral arch (spinal cord), are still flexible and can expand as the nervous system grows in size.
There is also growth you cannot see!
At the level of cells (neurons), the brain and spinal cord are continuing to make and break connections as the nervous system is remodelled with learning.
Here is how the human nervous system grows
Week 3 | Week 4 to 5 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 8 | Week 13 to 21 | Adult Human |
Neural Plate | Neural Tube | Simple Tube | Folded Tube | Central Nervous | Fetal Brain | Brain Slices |
Here is a developing mouse nervous system
width=336px|height=415px|controller=true|autoplay=false</qt> |
This movie shows a 11.5 days old mouse brain. (Mouse development takes 21 days and is a model used in research)
Red - brain
|
Comparative Brain Anatomy
In today's demonstration you will also see some models of brains from different species. Each coloured part on the brain models shows a different brain region each with a different function. Each brain region is the same colour (code) in all models.
- Do not worry about the names of all the different structures.
- Can you see the same coloured structures in all the brains?
- Are the same coloured structures the same shape and size in all brains?
(Link to Detailed Information, not part of demonstration)
About Brain Awareness Week
BAW - Brain Awareness Week is an inspirational global campaign that unites those who share an interest in elevating public awareness about the progress and benefits of brain and nervous system research.
|
More K12 Development Topics
Glossary Links
- Glossary: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Numbers | Symbols | Term Link
Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, April 26) Embryology Brain Awareness Week 2012. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Brain_Awareness_Week_2012
- © Dr Mark Hill 2024, UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2609 4 - UNSW CRICOS Provider Code No. 00098G