Their surface is made up of a series of folds called gyri, separated by fissures called sulci, with a deep longitudinal fissure separating the 2 hemispheres. The 4 main surface regions of each hemisphere the frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes are named after
their overlying bones.
Each hemisphere has a central cavity, called a ventricle, filled with cerebrospinal fluid. This is surrounded by an inner layer, consisting of clusters of nerve cells called the basal ganglia.
A middle layer of “white matter” is composed mainly of nerve fibres, which carry information between specific areas of the cortex and between areas of the cortex, central brain, and the brainstem. A thick band of fibres called the corpus callosum carries nerve signals between the 2 hemispheres.
The outer surface layer of each hemisphere is the cerebral cortex – the “grey matter’’, where much of the sensory information from organs such as the eyes and ears is processed. Specific sensory processing takes place in separate regions. For example, visual perception is located in a part of the occipital lobe called the visual cortex.
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