210 Chapter 8
located here are called upper motor neurons because of their role
in muscle regulation (chapter 12, section 12.5). The postcentral
gyrus, which is located behind the central sulcus in the parietal
lobe of each hemisphere, contains the somatosensory cortex. This
is the primary area responsible for the perception of somatesthetic
sensations —sensations arising from cutaneous, muscle, tendon,
and joint receptors. These neural pathways are described in chap-
ter 10, section 10.1.
The precentral (motor) and postcentral (sensory) gyri have
been mapped in conscious patients undergoing brain surgery.
Electrical stimulation of specific areas of the precentral gyrus
causes specific movements, and stimulation of different areas
of the postcentral gyrus evokes sensations in specific parts
called convolutions. The elevated folds of the convolutions are
called gyri, and the depressed grooves are the sulci. Each cere-
bral hemisphere is subdivided by deep sulci, or fissures, into
five lobes, four of which are visible from the surface ( fig. 8.6 ).
These lobes are the frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipi-
tal, which are visible from the surface, and the deep insula
( fig. 8.7 ), which is covered by portions of the frontal, parietal,
and temporal lobes ( table 8.1 ).
The frontal lobe is the anterior portion of each cerebral hemi-
sphere. A deep fissure, called the central sulcus, separates the fron-
tal lobe from the parietal lobe. The precentral gyrus ( figs. 8.5 and
8.6 ), involved in motor control, is located in the frontal lobe just
in front of the central sulcus. The cell bodies of the interneurons
Figure 8.5 The cerebrum. ( a ) A lateral view and ( b ) a superior view.
Superior frontal
gyrus
Superior
frontal
sulcus
Frontal
lobe
Lateral sulcus
Temporal lobe
Cerebellar
hemisphere
Occipital
lobe
Parietal lobe
Postcentral
gyrus
Central
sulcus
Precentral gyrus
(a)
Frontal poles
(b)
Longitudinal
fissure
Central
sulcus
Parietal
lobe
Superior
frontal
sulcus
Superior
frontal gyrus
Occipital poles
Central sulcus
General
interpretive area
Occipital lobe
Parietal lobe
Somatosensory cortex for
cutaneous and
proprioceptive senses
Cerebellum
Combining visual images,
visual recognition of objects
Brain stem
Frontal lobe
Motor speech area
(Broca’s area)
Lateral sulcus
Auditory area
Interpretation of sensory
experiences, memory of
visual and auditory patterns
Temporal
lobe
Primary motor cortex involved
with the control of voluntary
muscles
Figure 8.6 The lobes of the left cerebral hemisphere.
This diagram shows the principal motor and sensory areas of the
cerebral cortex.