[picture of front of brain]

Large Scale Features



The Brain Tour Table of Contents:
History of the Study of the Brain
Large Scale Features
Building Blocks
Organization


Large Scale Features

The brain is probably the most complex structure in the known universe; complex enough to coordinate the fingers of a concert pianist or to create a three-dimensional landscape from light that falls on a two-dimensional retina. While it is the product of many millions of years of evolution, some of the structures unique to the human species have only appeared relatively recently.

[picture of brain from side]
For example, only 100,000 years ago, the ancestors of modern man had a brain weighing only about one pound - roughly a third of the weight of the current version. Most of this increased weight is associated with the most striking feature of the human brain - the cortex - the two roughly symmetrical, corrugated and folded hemispheres which sit astride the central core.

Almost all the tasks that seem hard or difficult for human beings but that the present generation of computers can easily perform are associated with processing in parts of the relatively new cortex. Conversely, tasks that humans normally find easy but that are difficult for computers typically have a much longer evolutionary history. Although playing chess, doing higher mathematics and trouble-shooting electronic circuits may seem intellectually challenging for humans, current computers can cope very straightforwardly. However, a modern computer (even after much careful programming) is typically very poor at such simple tasks as sensing its environment or coordinating movements. A simple operation like recognizing someone's face, which we find rather straightforward, is a formidable problem for a computer. Indeed, a 2-year-old child will perform much better at these tasks! This observation is not so surprising, though, when one considers that the child is using multiple levels of processing that have evolved over many hundreds of thousands of years.

In evolutionary terms, all brains are extensions of the spinal cord. The distant ancestor of the human brain originated in the primordial seas some 500,000,000 years ago. Life and survival in those seas was relatively simple and in consequence these early brains consisted of just a few hundred nerve cells. As these initial sea-creatures evolved and became more complex, so too did the brain. A major change occurred when these early fish crawled out of the seas and onto the land. The enhanced difficulties of survival on land led to the creation of the "reptilian brain". This brain design is still visible in all modern reptiles and mammals and is a powerful clue to our common evolutionary ancestry.

The next major addition occurred with the mammalian brain in which a new structure emerged - the cerebrum or forebrain along with its covering, the cortex. By now, the brain consisted of literally hundreds of millions of nerve cells organized into separate regions of the brain and associated with different tasks. About 5,000,000 years ago, another type of cortex appeared in a new species - early man. In this brain, the surface of the cortex was organized into separate columnar regions less than one millimeter wide but each containing many millions of nerve cells or neurons. This new structure allowed much more complex processing to take place. Finally, about 100,000 years ago, this new cortex underwent rapid expansion with the advent of modern man. The present day cortex contains something like two-thirds of all neurons and weighs about three pounds - almost triple its weight only one hundred thousand years ago!


[picture with a slice of the brain] Thus the human brain consists of roughly three separate parts.

As we have seen, much of the lower and mid brain are relatively simple systems which are capable of registering experiences and regulating behavior largely outside of any conscious awareness (we don't have to think to remember to breathe!). In a sense, the human brain is like an archeological site with the outer layer composed of the most recent brain structure, and the deeper layers consisting of structures from our shared evolutionary history with the reptiles and mammals.

These structural features of the brain have been known for some time. In the section Building Blocks we will explore the nature of the cells themselves and later in Organization try to understand how this set of intercommunicating complex structures we have described can possibly arise from the function and organization of the neurons themselves.

Previous: History of the Study of the Brain. - Next: Building Blocks.


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