Home

Tutoring

Subjects

Live Classes

Study Coach

Essay Review

On-Demand Courses

Colleges

Games

Opening subject page...

Loading your content

  1. AP Psychology
  2. The Brain

AP PSYCHOLOGY • BIOLOGICAL BASES OF BEHAVIOR

The Brain

Understanding how the brain's structures and systems produce behavior, cognition, and emotion.

SECTION 1

Historical Context & Motivation

For most of recorded history, the seat of the mind was a matter of intense philosophical debate—Aristotle argued that the heart was the organ of thought, while the brain was merely a radiator that cooled the blood. It was not until systematic anatomical investigation and clinical case studies accumulated over centuries that neuroscience established the brain as the undisputed organ of cognition, emotion, and behavior. Understanding this historical trajectory is essential because many of the brain-mapping techniques and functional divisions you will encounter on the AP Psychology exam grew directly out of these early debates and discoveries.

1848
Phineas Gage's Accident
A railroad worker survives an iron rod driven through his prefrontal cortex, demonstrating that specific brain regions govern personality and impulse control—one of the first compelling case studies in localization of function.
1861
Broca's Area Identified
Paul Broca examines patient 'Tan,' who could understand language but not produce it. Autopsy reveals damage to the left frontal lobe, establishing Broca's area as critical for speech production.
1874
Wernicke's Area Discovered
Carl Wernicke identifies a region in the left temporal lobe whose damage impairs language comprehension, solidifying the view that different cortical areas handle distinct cognitive tasks.
1950s
Split-Brain Studies Begin
Roger Sperry and Michael Gazzaniga study patients whose corpus callosum has been severed, revealing hemispheric specialization and earning Sperry the 1981 Nobel Prize.
1990s
The Decade of the Brain & fMRI
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allows researchers to observe the living brain in action, shifting neuroscience from lesion studies to real-time mapping of neural activity.

These milestones reveal a recurring theme: our understanding of the brain has advanced most dramatically when injury or experimental intervention exposes the function of a specific structure. The central question that organizes this lesson is straightforward yet profound—how do the brain's anatomical structures map onto the psychological processes of sensation, movement, emotion, memory, language, and thought?

SECTION 2

Core Principles of Brain Organization

Before examining individual structures, it is important to understand the overarching organizational principles that govern how the brain operates. These principles recur throughout the AP Psychology curriculum and serve as a conceptual scaffolding for relating anatomy to behavior.

1

Localization of Function

Specific brain regions are associated with specific psychological functions. Damage to Broca's area, for example, selectively impairs speech production while leaving comprehension largely intact.
2

Lateralization

The two cerebral hemispheres, while structurally similar, show functional asymmetries. In most right-handed individuals, the left hemisphere dominates for language, while the right hemisphere excels at spatial processing and holistic perception.
3

Contralateral Control

Each hemisphere primarily controls the opposite side of the body. Sensory input from the right visual field projects to the left hemisphere, and motor commands from the left motor cortex move the right limbs.
4

Neuroplasticity

The brain can reorganize its neural pathways in response to learning, experience, or injury. Younger brains exhibit greater plasticity, but even adult brains retain significant capacity for structural and functional change.
5

Hierarchical Processing

Information flows from lower, more primitive structures (brainstem) to higher, more complex ones (cerebral cortex). Basic survival functions are managed at lower levels; abstract reasoning and planning occur at the highest cortical level.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of the brain as a large corporation. The brainstem is the maintenance crew that keeps the building's electricity, plumbing, and HVAC running—without it, nothing else works. The limbic system is the human resources department, managing morale (emotion) and institutional memory. The cerebral cortex is the executive suite where strategic planning, creative problem-solving, and high-level decision-making occur. Each department is essential, and they constantly communicate through internal channels—just as neural pathways interconnect every brain region.
SECTION 3

Visual Overview — Major Brain Structures

Sagittal View — Major Brain StructuresFrontalLobeParietal LobeOccipitalLobeTemporal LobeCerebellumBrain-stemPlanning, judgment,personality, motor controlSomatosensory processing,spatial awarenessVisual processingAuditory processing,language comprehensionBalance, coordination,motor learning
Sagittal view of the brain showing the four lobes of the cerebral cortex—frontal (violet), parietal (cyan), occipital (green), and temporal (pink)—along with the cerebellum and brainstem.

The diagram above illustrates the brain's major divisions visible in a medial (sagittal) view. Notice how the frontal lobe occupies the anterior portion and is associated with executive functions like planning, judgment, and voluntary motor control. Immediately posterior to the central sulcus (the groove separating front from back) lies the parietal lobe, which processes somatosensory information such as touch, temperature, and proprioception. At the very back of the brain, the occipital lobe handles visual processing, while the temporal lobe on the lateral surface processes auditory information and contributes to language comprehension and memory formation. Beneath the cortex, the cerebellum coordinates fine motor movements and balance, and the brainstem regulates vital autonomic functions including heartbeat, respiration, and arousal.

SECTION 4

How the Brain Works — From Brainstem to Cortex

The Brainstem: Life Support

The brainstem is the most evolutionarily ancient region and consists of three major structures. The medulla oblongata sits at the base and controls automatic survival functions such as heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing. Just above it, the pons serves as a bridge between higher brain centers and the cerebellum and plays a role in regulating sleep and arousal. The reticular formation, a diffuse network of neurons extending through the brainstem, filters incoming stimuli and controls wakefulness and attention—damage to this system can result in a coma.

The Limbic System: Emotion, Memory, and Motivation

Nestled between the brainstem and the cortex, the limbic system is a collection of interconnected structures that regulate emotional responses, motivation, and certain types of memory. The amygdala, an almond-shaped cluster deep within the temporal lobe, is the brain's alarm system—it is critical for processing fear and aggression, and it flags emotionally significant stimuli for enhanced encoding into memory. The hippocampus, a seahorse-shaped structure adjacent to the amygdala, is essential for the consolidation of new explicit (declarative) memories; patients with bilateral hippocampal damage, such as the famous case of H.M., can no longer form new long-term memories. The hypothalamus, though small—about the size of a pearl—exerts enormous influence over homeostasis by regulating hunger, thirst, body temperature, and the endocrine system through its control of the pituitary gland. Finally, the thalamus functions as the brain's sensory relay station, routing incoming sensory information (all senses except olfaction) to the appropriate cortical processing areas.

The Cerebral Cortex: Higher-Order Processing

The cerebral cortex is the brain's outermost layer of densely packed neurons—only about 2 to 4 millimeters thick, yet containing roughly 20 billion neurons and accounting for approximately 80% of the brain's total mass when the underlying white matter is included. Its extensive folding into gyri (ridges) and sulci (grooves) dramatically increases surface area, enabling the vast computational power that distinguishes human cognition. Each of the four lobes contains specialized regions: the frontal lobe houses the primary motor cortex (precentral gyrus) and the prefrontal cortex for executive functions; the parietal lobe contains the somatosensory cortex (postcentral gyrus); and the temporal lobe includes auditory processing areas and Wernicke's area. Large portions of the cortex, known as association areas, integrate information from multiple sensory modalities and are responsible for complex cognitive tasks such as reasoning, problem-solving, and personality expression.

📝 AP Exam Tip
The AP exam frequently tests the distinction between Broca's area (left frontal lobe → speech production; damage causes nonfluent aphasia) and Wernicke's area (left temporal lobe → language comprehension; damage causes fluent but nonsensical speech). A helpful mnemonic: Broca = Broken speech; Wernicke = Wordy but wrong.
SECTION 5

Detailed Brain Structure Map

Brain Structures — Functional HierarchyHIGHERLOWERCEREBRAL CORTEXFrontal LobeMotor cortexPrefrontal cortexParietal LobeSomatosensory cortexSpatial processingTemporal LobeAuditory cortexWernicke's areaOccipital LobePrimary visual cortexVisual association areasLIMBIC SYSTEMAmygdalaFear, aggressionEmotional memoryHippocampusExplicit memoryconsolidationHypothalamusHomeostasis, hunger,thirst, endocrineThalamusSensory relay(all except smell)BRAINSTEM & CEREBELLUMMedullaHeart rate, breathing,blood pressurePonsSleep regulation,relay to cerebellumReticular FormationArousal, alertness,attention filteringCerebellumMotor coordination,balance, motor learningInformation flows upward from brainstem → limbic system → cortex (bottom-up) and cortex → lower areas (top-down)
Hierarchical organization of brain structures from lower (brainstem, handling survival functions) to higher (cerebral cortex, handling abstract cognition). Arrows indicate the general flow of information processing.
Key brain structures, their locations, functions, and effects of damage — commonly tested on the AP Psychology exam.
StructureLocationPrimary Function(s)Effect of Damage
MedullaBrainstem baseHeart rate, breathing, blood pressureFatal—loss of autonomic life support
PonsAbove medullaSleep, relay to cerebellumSleep disturbances, coordination issues
Reticular FormationThrough brainstemArousal, attention filteringComa or persistent vegetative state
CerebellumPosterior, below cortexMotor coordination, balance, procedural memoryAtaxia (clumsy, uncoordinated movement)
ThalamusCentral, top of brainstemSensory relay (except olfaction)Sensory processing disruption
HypothalamusBelow thalamusHomeostasis, hunger, thirst, endocrine controlDisrupted body regulation, hormonal imbalance
AmygdalaMedial temporal lobeFear, aggression, emotional memoryImpaired fear conditioning; flat affect
HippocampusMedial temporal lobeExplicit memory consolidationAnterograde amnesia (cannot form new memories)
Broca's AreaLeft frontal lobeSpeech productionNonfluent (expressive) aphasia
Wernicke's AreaLeft temporal lobeLanguage comprehensionFluent (receptive) aphasia
SECTION 6

Worked Example — Identifying Brain Structures from Case Descriptions

A common AP Psychology exam strategy involves reading a clinical case description and identifying which brain structure is implicated. Let us walk through a representative example step by step.

Case Study: Patient J.R.

Step 1 — Read the Case

Patient J.R. suffered a stroke that affected a region in the left hemisphere. After the stroke, J.R. can understand spoken and written language perfectly and can follow complex instructions. However, when J.R. attempts to speak, the output is slow, effortful, and limited to short, fragmented phrases such as 'walk… dog… outside.' J.R. is visibly frustrated by this difficulty.

Step 2 — Identify the Symptom Pattern

The critical features are: (a) intact comprehension of language, (b) impaired speech production characterized by halting, telegraphic speech, and (c) awareness and frustration about the deficit. This pattern is consistent with nonfluent (expressive) aphasia.
Diagnosis: Nonfluent (Broca's) aphasia

Step 3 — Match Symptom to Brain Structure

Nonfluent aphasia is associated with damage to Broca's area, located in the left frontal lobe (specifically the left inferior frontal gyrus). Broca's area is responsible for the motor planning and execution of speech. When this area is damaged, the patient retains the ability to comprehend language (a function of Wernicke's area in the temporal lobe) but cannot produce fluent speech.
Affected structure: Broca's area (left frontal lobe)

Step 4 — Eliminate Alternative Explanations

If the damage were to Wernicke's area, the patient would speak fluently but produce meaningless or jumbled sentences—this does not match J.R.'s presentation. If the damage were to the motor cortex controlling the mouth and tongue, J.R. might have difficulty with all oral movements (eating, swallowing), not just speech planning. If the hippocampus were damaged, the primary deficit would be memory, not language. By systematically ruling out alternatives, we confirm the answer.
Final Answer: Damage to Broca's area in the left frontal lobe
SECTION 7

Brain Imaging Techniques — Strengths & Limitations

Modern neuroscience relies on a suite of brain imaging technologies, each with its own strengths and limitations. The AP Psychology exam expects you to distinguish among these techniques and understand when each is most appropriate. Below is a comparative overview of the major imaging methods.

Comparison of major brain imaging techniques tested on the AP Psychology exam.
TechniqueWhat It MeasuresStrengthsLimitations
EEGElectrical activity (brain waves) via scalp electrodesExcellent temporal resolution (milliseconds); non-invasive; inexpensivePoor spatial resolution—cannot pinpoint exact brain region
CT ScanStructural anatomy using X-ray cross-sectionsFast; shows tumors, lesions, and structural damageRadiation exposure; reveals structure, not function
MRIDetailed structural anatomy using magnetic fieldsExcellent spatial resolution; no radiation; detailed soft tissue imagesExpensive; no real-time functional data; patient must remain still
fMRIBlood oxygen levels as proxy for neural activityGood spatial resolution; shows which areas are active during tasksSlow temporal resolution (~seconds); measures blood flow, not neurons directly
PET ScanMetabolic activity via radioactive glucose tracerShows functional activity; useful for studying neurotransmitter systemsRequires injection of radioactive substance; lower resolution than fMRI
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of brain imaging like different types of cameras. An EEG is like a high-speed video camera—it captures events as they happen (great temporal resolution) but produces a blurry image (poor spatial resolution). An MRI is like a high-resolution still photograph—sharp detail of structure but no motion. An fMRI is like a time-lapse camera—it shows changes over seconds with good detail but misses the fastest events. Knowing which 'camera' to use depends on whether you need speed, spatial precision, or functional insight.
SECTION 8

Hemispheric Specialization & Neuroplasticity

Two advanced topics frequently appear on the AP Psychology exam and connect to broader themes in cognitive neuroscience: hemispheric specialization (often studied through split-brain research) and neuroplasticity (the brain's ability to reorganize itself). Both concepts challenge the outdated notion that the brain is a static, hardwired organ.

Hemispheric specialization based on split-brain and laterality research. Note: in healthy brains, the corpus callosum integrates both hemispheres seamlessly.
FeatureLeft HemisphereRight Hemisphere
LanguageDominant for speech production (Broca's) and comprehension (Wernicke's)Processes tone of voice, emotional prosody, and some aspects of humor/sarcasm
Spatial ProcessingDetail-oriented; focuses on components of a sceneDominant for spatial reasoning, face recognition, and holistic perception
Processing StyleSequential, analytical, logicalSimultaneous, integrative, pattern-based
Mathematical AbilityExact calculations, algebraic operationsEstimation, numerical comparison

It is critical to note that popular culture greatly oversimplifies hemispheric differences—the notion that people are 'left-brained' or 'right-brained' is a myth. In a healthy, intact brain, the corpus callosum (a thick band of approximately 200 million axons) ensures constant communication between the two hemispheres, so virtually every complex task engages both sides of the brain. The lateralization findings come primarily from split-brain patients whose corpus callosum was severed to treat severe epilepsy.

Neuroplasticity represents one of the most exciting frontiers in neuroscience and has direct implications for rehabilitation after brain injury. Research demonstrates that when one brain area is damaged, neighboring regions can sometimes assume its functions—a process called cortical reorganization. In young children, plasticity is particularly remarkable: if the entire left hemisphere is removed (hemispherectomy) to treat severe epilepsy, the right hemisphere can often take over language functions to a surprising degree. Even in adults, learning a new skill—such as playing the piano or studying for the AP exam—physically reshapes neural connections through processes like long-term potentiation and synaptogenesis. Neuroplasticity thus bridges biological bases of behavior with topics like learning, memory, and development that appear throughout the AP curriculum.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
A patient suffers damage to the hippocampus and subsequently has difficulty forming new long-term memories of facts and events, but can still learn new motor skills. Which of the following best explains this pattern?
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC
Which brain structure serves as the primary relay station for sensory information (with the notable exception of olfaction) before that information reaches the cerebral cortex?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
A researcher presents a picture of a spoon exclusively to the left visual field of a split-brain patient. When asked to verbally name the object, the patient cannot do so. However, when asked to reach behind a screen with the left hand and pick out the object by touch, the patient correctly selects the spoon. Which of the following best explains this finding?
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
A research team is investigating the neural correlates of decision-making under risk. They want to observe which brain regions become more active as participants choose between safe and risky monetary gambles. The study requires good spatial resolution to identify specific brain regions, and the participants will perform the gambling task inside the scanner. Part A: Identify the most appropriate brain imaging technique for this study and justify your choice. Part B: Explain why two other imaging techniques would be less suitable. Part C: Identify one brain region the researchers would likely observe increased activation in during risky decision-making, and explain why. Part D: Describe one limitation of the chosen imaging technique that the researchers should acknowledge.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
A popular psychology article claims: 'Creative people are right-brained, while analytical people are left-brained. To improve creativity, you should engage in exercises that activate your right hemisphere.' Part A: Evaluate the scientific validity of the 'left-brained vs. right-brained' claim, citing evidence from split-brain research. Part B: Explain the role of the corpus callosum and why it undermines the claim made in the article. Part C: Describe how the concept of neuroplasticity challenges the idea that cognitive abilities are fixed to one hemisphere. Part D: Propose one methodological approach a researcher could use to test whether creativity is truly lateralized to the right hemisphere, and explain what results would support or refute the claim.
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary

The brain is organized hierarchically, from the evolutionarily ancient brainstem (including the medulla, pons, and reticular formation) that governs survival functions, through the limbic system (the amygdala for emotion, the hippocampus for explicit memory, the hypothalamus for homeostasis, and the thalamus as the sensory relay), up to the cerebral cortex with its four lobes (frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal) and specialized areas such as Broca's area (speech production) and Wernicke's area (language comprehension).

Key principles include localization of function (specific structures serve specific roles), lateralization (hemispheric specialization connected by the corpus callosum), contralateral control (each hemisphere manages the opposite side of the body), and neuroplasticity (the brain's capacity to reorganize in response to experience or injury). Brain imaging techniques—EEG, CT, MRI, fMRI, and PET—each offer distinct trade-offs between spatial and temporal resolution, and understanding when to apply each method is a frequently tested skill on the AP Psychology exam.

Varsity Tutors • AP Psychology • The Brain