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Interactive Brain Map - etwinning
Magdalena Kraus
Created on March 8, 2025
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Transcript
Interactive Brain Map
Common product created by the partners of the eTwinning project "STEAM for Wellbeing"
Parietal Lobe
Cerebral cortex
Frontal Lobe
Occipital Lobe
Temporal Lobe
Cerebellum
Brainstem
The Cerebral Cortex
Visual content is a universal, cross-cutting language, much like music. We are capable of understanding images from millions of years ago, even from other cultures.
Thinking and making decisions
Language and communication
Planning and organizing
Cerebral cortex is responsible for thinking, memory, language, perception, and decision-making.
Memory and learning
Problem-solving
Sensory perception
The cerebral cortex is the outer layer of the brain responsible for thinking, memory, language, perception, and decision-making. It controls higher cognitive functions that make us human.
Puzzle
GAME
Quiz
Visual System - Occipital Lobe
The occipital lobe's main job is to process what you see. It takes the signals from your eyes and turns them into images your brain can understand. It helps you see colors, shapes, and movement. Essentially, it's the part of your brain that makes sense of the visual world around you.
Seeing shapes and how things move.
The occipital lobe helps us "see" the world in our brain. When we look at something, our eyes send images to this part of the brain, which helps us understand what we’re seeing, like whether something is red, round, or moving.
Processing visual information
Recognizing faces and objects
Understanding depthand distance
The occipital lobe is the visual processing center of the brain. Here are some interesting facts:It primarily processes visual information received from the eyes. Damage to the occipital lobe can lead to visual impairments like blindness or difficulty recognizing objects (visual agnosia). The occipital lobe also plays a role in spatial awareness and depth perception.
Reading and writing
GAME
Action
Our brain is biologically prepared to process visual content. Almost 50% of our brain is involved in processing visual stimuli.
Your parietal lobe is one of five lobes in your brain. This part of your brain helps many different areas work together. This cooperation is key to many of the skills you use in your daily life. It also includes your brain’s ability to interpret sensations coming from anywhere in your body or from within it.
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Receiving touch information
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A child touching different objects, like a warm mug, a cold ice cube, or a soft ball. The child’s face shows reactions as they feel different tactile sensations.
Your parietal lobe is located at the top of your head, at the back of your skull.
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Solving simple space-related tasks
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A child counting fingers or solving a math problem on the board. In the background, other children are working on similar tasks, showing the parietal lobe's role in logical thinking.
Temporal Lobe
Temporal Lobe - the temporal lobe of your brain is a pair of areas on your brain’s left and right sides. These areas, which are inside your skull near your temples and ears, play a role in managing your emotions, processing information from your senses, storing and retrieving memories, and understanding language.
Processing sound (e.g., hearing and recognizing sounds)
Emotions and social behavior
Understanding speech and language
Recognizing faces and objects
Memory (e.g., remembering things and events)
The frontal lobe helps us with:
The frontal lobe is a part of the brain that helps us think, make decisions, and control our behavior. Thanks to it, we can plan, solve problems, and learn new things. It allows us to focus on tasks, remember important information, and manage our emotions. You can compare it to a conductor in an orchestra – it directs our actions so that everything works well and at the right moment!
Controlling emotions
🧠 Thinking
🔎 The frontal lobe helps us understand jokes and sarcasm! It’s the part of the brain that makes us laugh at funny things. 😄
📝 Planning
Making decisions
Controlling movements
🎯 Focusing
The frontal lobe is one of the last parts of the brain to fully develop! In children and teenagers, it is still growing, which is why it can be hard for them to control emotions or make smart decisions. It reaches its full "adult" form around the age of 25! 🧠🎓
QUIZ
GAME
Brainstem
It is the part that is responsible for many of the functions in the body and has a structure that connects the brain and spinal cord. The brainstem consists of three parts: the midbrain, the pons, and the medulla oblongata.
Hearing
Maintains balance
Sleep and wakefulness
Regulates blood pressure
Swallowing
Breathing
Tasting
Eye movements
Sultanhisar Bilim ve Sanat Merkezi
Conditional evaluation
Our brain is biologically prepared to process visual content. Almost 50% of our brain is involved in processingvisual stimuli.
Establish a flow through the content
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Plan the structureof your communication
Tell stories hierarchically
Hierarchize and givevisual weight to the main
Adapt fontsand color to the theme
Plan the structureof your communication
Excite the brain, through multimedia elements
Define secondary messages withinteractivity
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Cerebellum
The cerebellum plays a vital role in function and mobility. Traditionally known functions of the cerebellum include:
Motor learning
Motor movement regulation
Coordination of movement
Balance control