STRUCTURE AND FUNCTIONS OF THE CEREBRUM 147 



hemispheres; these serve to unify the anatomically double cere- 

 brum into a single physiological organ; the corpus callosum (Cc, 

 Fig. 62) is made up of commissural fibers. 



Lobes of the Cerebrum. The convolutions of the cerebrum are 

 sufficiently constant in number and position to serve as land- 

 marks in locating particular regions. The individual convolutions, 

 or gyri, have been given specific names, as have also the fissures, 

 or sulci, which separate them. For our purposes' it is necessary 

 to mention by name only those fissures which mark off the grand 

 divisions, or lobes, of the cerebrum. The division of the cerebrum 

 into lobes is purely arbitrary, and is made for greater ease in 

 describing it. In general the lobes correspond in position to the 

 overlying skull bones for which they are named. The fissures 

 which mark the boundaries of the lobes are indicated in Fig. 61. 

 They are the fissure of Sylvius, the fissure of Rolando, and the 

 Parieto-occipital fissure. The frontal lobe is that part of the 

 cerebrum above the fissure of Sylvius and in front of the fissure 

 of Rolando; the parietal lobe is between the fissure of Rolando and 

 the parieto-occipital fissure ; the occipital lobe is the wedge-shaped 

 portion behind the parieto-occipital fissure; the temporal lobe is 

 below the fissure of Sylvius; it is the only one of the lobes which 

 is sharply set off as a distinct region. 



Cortical Localization. A problem of much interest in connec- 

 tion with the study of cerebral functions is whether there is di- 

 vision of labor among the various parts of the cortex. Do certain 

 groups of cells perform certain special functions, or are all cortical 

 activities shared in by all the cells? This is not the place for a 

 history of the solution of this problem. Suffice it to say that we 

 now have positive proof of a high degree of specialization of 

 function in the cortex. 



Sensory Areas. In previous paragraphs the paths of the 

 various senses were traced as far as their entrance into the cere- 

 brum by way of the internal capsule. We must now continue 

 the paths to their cortical terminations. The body sense-fibers 

 pass to that part of the parietal lobe just behind the fissure of 

 Rolando; the region where they terminate is the body sense area. 

 The visual tracts end in the occipital lobes in the visual areas. 

 The auditory tracts terminate in the temporal lobes in a region 

 just below and within the fissure of Sylvius; this region con- 



