Brain Hemispheres and Neurons
Your brain has two hemispheres that specialize in different functions. The left hemisphere handles speech, language, analysis, calculations, and recognizes words and numbers. It processes sensory information from and controls movement of the right side of your body.
The right hemisphere focuses on creativity, spatial ability, context perception, and recognizes faces, places, and objects. It processes sensory information from and controls movement of the left side of your body.
In split-brain patients (where the corpus callosum is cut), images shown to the left visual field are processed by the right visual cortex, and vice versa. This demonstrates how information crosses in the brain.
Afferent neurons (sensory neurons) bring information from the outside world into the brain, while efferent neurons (motor neurons) tell your body to perform actions. For example, if you touch something hot, efferent neurons signal your hand to pull away in a reflex action.
Remember This: The left brain controls the right side of the body, and the right brain controls the left side of the body. This crossing-over is a key feature of our nervous system!
When studying neurons, focus on understanding how they transmit information and how different neural pathways control various bodily functions.