Temporal Lobe
Temporal Lobe
Temporal Lobe
V M SALIMA HABEEB
Lateral Aspect
• Two Sulci
– Superior temporal sulcus
– Inferior temporal sulcus
• Three Gyri
– Superior temporal gyrus
– Middle temporal gyrus
– Inferior temporal gyrus
SUPERIOR TEMPORAL GYRUS
• It is located between the superior temporal gyrus and inferior temporal gyrus.
• Believed to play a part in auditory processing and language.
• It has been connected with processes as different as contemplating distance,
recognition of known faces, audio-visual emotional recognition, and
accessing word meaning while reading.
INFERIOR TEMPORAL GYRUS
B. Religiosity
• There is a clinical impression that some patients with right hemispheric temporal lobe
lesions undergo an increase in religiousness, sometimes to the extent that the term
‘‘hyperreligiosity’’ is applicable.
C. Emotion
• The amygdala, in particular, has been seen as contributing to normal and
abnormal emotional responses and experiences.
• Bilateral amygdaloid destruction causes a severe disturbance of normal
affective behavior (Kluver–Bucy syndrome); damage in humans is usually
unilateral and often incomplete, but even unilateral amygdaloid damage has
led to changes in emotional experience.
• Recently, the amygdala has been implicated in the manifestations of
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
D. Visual Perception
• The areas associated with vision in the temporal lobe interpret the meaning of
visual stimuli and establish object recognition.
• The ventral part of the temporal cortices appears to be involved in high-level
visual processing of complex stimuli such as faces (fusiform gyrus) and
scenes (parahippocampal gyrus).
E. Face Recognition
• An important part of the visual input goes to the inferior temporal lobe, where
representations of objects, particularly faces, are stored.
• Faces are particularly important in distinguishing friends from foes and the
emotional state of those seen.
• Storage and recognition of faces is more strongly represented in the right inferior
temporal lobe in right-handed individuals, though the left lobe is also active.
• Damage to this area can cause prosopagnosia, the inability to recognize faces.
Patients with this abnormality can recognize forms and reproduce them.
• They can recognize people by their voices, and many of them show autonomic
responses when they see familiar as opposed to unfamiliar faces. However, they
cannot identify the familiar faces they see.
• The presence of an autonomic response to a familiar face in the absence of
recognition implicates the existence of a separate dorsal pathway for
processing information about faces that leads to recognition at only a
subconscious level.
• Persons with prosopagnosia are usually also unable to learn new faces, at
least when tested using conscious recognition.
• The disorder may be accompanied by difficulty recognizing (naming) famous
buildings, and such individuals may also have difficulty with texture
discriminations and color perception.
• In addition, attempts to name objects may result in the use of a general
category rather than the object’s unique name (e.g. ‘‘bird’’ rather than the
more specific ‘‘robin’’ or ‘‘peacock’’).
F. Language
• The temporal lobe holds the primary auditory cortex, which is important for
the processing of semantics in both language and vision in humans.
• Wernicke's area, which spans the region between temporal and parietal lobes,
plays a key role (in tandem with Broca's area in the frontal lobe) in language
comprehension, whether spoken language or signed language.
• FMRI imaging shows these portions of the brain are activated by signed or
spoken languages.These areas of the brain are active in children's language
acquisition whether accessed via hearing a spoken language
STRANGENESS & FAMILIARITY
• Stimulation of some parts of the temporal lobes causes a change in interpretation of
one’s surroundings.
• For example, when the stimulus is applied, the subject may feel strange in a familiar
place or may feel that what is happening now has happened before.
• The occurrence of a sense of familiarity or a sense of strangeness in appropriate
situations may help the healthy individual adjust to the environment.
• In strange surroundings, one is alert and on guard, whereas in familiar surroundings,
vigilance is relaxed.
• An inappropriate feeling of familiarity with new events or in new surroundings is
known as the déjà vu phenomenon from the French words meaning “already seen.”
• This occurs occasionally in healthy persons, and it may also occur as an aura (a
sensation immediately preceding a seizure) in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.
DAMAGE OF TEMPORAL LOBE
8 principle symptoms of Temporal lobe damage
1. Disturbance of auditory sensation and perception
2. Disturbance of selective attention of auditory and visual input
3. Disorders of visual perception
4. Impaired organization and categorization of verbal material
5. Disturbance of language comprehension
6. Impaired long-term memory
7. Altered personality and affective behaviour
8. Altered sexual behaviour
DISORDERS OF AUDITORY AND VISUAL PERCEPTION
• Temporal lobe epilepsy is the most common form of focal epilepsy. Seizures in TLE
start or involve in one or both temporal lobes in the brain.
• There are two types of TLE:
• Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) involves the medial or internal structures of the
temporal lobe. Seizures often begin in a structure of the brain called the hippocampus or
surrounding area. MTLE accounts for almost 80% of all temporal lobe seizures.
• Medial temporal lobe epilepsy usually begins around age 10 or 20, but it can start at any
age.
• Neocortical or lateral temporal lobe epilepsy involves the outer part of the temporal lobe.
• This type of TLE is very rare and mostly due to a genetic cause or lesions such as a
tumor, birth defect, blood vessel abnormality or other abnormalities in the temporal lobe.
Symptoms
• Symptoms depend on how the seizure begins.
• Patient may have an aura before a temporal lobe seizure. An aura is an unusual sensation
that feel before a seizure starts.
• Not everyone experiences an aura. They typically last from a few seconds to two
minutes.
Circumstantiality
• Caused by a blunt force, a fall, concussive waves through the air (usually an
explosion) severe whiplash, toxins or infections.
• Symptoms :- Include all of the above temporal lobe disorder symptoms, plus
difficulty recognizing faces (prosopagnosia) short-term memory loss and
aggressive behaviour.
• Also can cause epilepsy and progressive disorders such as Parkinson's disease
in the long term.
THANK YOU