1.Right parietal lobe (supramarginal gyrus) was engaged only in the complex task might because this region were involved in visuospatial memory and processing.
2.Apraxia arises from lesion to the regions associated with preparation and planning for the motor act, specifically the supramarginal gyrus of the parietal lobe, Broca's area, and the SMA.
8.And those losses start in the parietal lobe, an area of the brain that handles sensory information and some sound processing, among other things, which might help explain the hallucinations.
9.Like, we know the parietal lobe plays a big role in spatial reasoning, and there's a parietal visual pathway that's typically associated with perception of where things are in space.
10.In a study in 2005, people who felt that illusion more strongly also had more activation in two parts of their parietal lobe, suggesting they're involved in your sense of how big your body is.
11.The most obvious is the cerebrum, which is divided into two cerebral hemispheres, each of which has a cortex, or an outer region, divided into four lobes, including the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, and the occipital lobe.