frontal lobe in English

noun
1
each of the paired lobes of the brain lying immediately behind the forehead, including areas concerned with behavior, learning, personality, and voluntary movement.
Damage to their temporal lobes or frontal lobes was not as great as those included in the other two groups.

Use "frontal lobe" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "frontal lobe" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "frontal lobe", or refer to the context using the word "frontal lobe" in the English Dictionary.

1. He has a golfballsized tumor on his frontal lobe.

2. Other signs are frontal Bossing, persistent frontal lobe reflexes, strabismus and seizures

3. This pattern was not associated with frontal lobe dysfunction on neuropsychological testing.

4. Small strokes of frontal lobe seldom come to the attention of neurologists.

5. A tumor had formed in the right frontal lobe of his brain.

6. As frontal lobe function deteriorates further, the patient repeats actions over and over.

7. Objective To discuss the clinical characteristic and therapeutic strategy contrecoup injury in frontal lobe.

8. Methods A series of 120 patients with contrecoup injury in frontal lobe were analysed retrospectively.

9. The cerebral Cortex consists of four lobes; frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, and occipital lobe

10. This phenomenon, known as confabulation in psychiatric jargon, is also found in people with frontal lobe disorders.

11. Previous studies of novelty-seeking behaviour suggest that it is managed by the brain's right frontal lobe.

12. Certainly this frontal lobe role in adaptive behavior is linked to the mechanisms of selective attention.

13. George chatted with the patient for a moment and went on to test more of the frontal lobe.

14. Simple skull X - ray showed a large air - containing cyst in the left frontal lobe in both cases.

15. Failure in this frontal-thalamic link accounts for loss of interest in the surroundings after frontal lobe damage.

16. This occurs in extensive bilateral frontal lobe dysfunction and is usually due to vascular disease, hydrocephalus,(Sentencedict.com) or massive neoplasia.

17. The gene heightens normally occurring connections between the taste area in his frontal lobe and the color area further back.

18. These sections or Brain lobes are called the Frontal Lobe, Temporal Lobe, Parietal Lobe, Occipital Lobe, the Cerebellum, and the Brain Stem

19. It showed a tumor in the frontal lobe in a very awkward place: close to the motor strip and language areas.

20. And now, the parts of the brain, performed by The Brain! Yes! Neo-cortex, frontal lobe Brainstem! Brainstem! Hippocampus, neural node Right hemisphere

21. The best method is choosing big bone flap craniotomy and partly recovery of frontal bone modified decompression in the therapy of frontal lobe contusion.

22. Seen here are remote contusions , mainly of the right inferior frontal lobe. The crests of the gyri are most susceptible to the traumatic forces.

23. Three-dimensional play fires up the cerebellum, puts a lot of impulses into the frontal lobe -- the executive portion -- helps contextual memory be developed, and -- and, and, and.

24. They compared her performance on a range of psychological tests with that of two patients with frontal lobe brain damage who don't confabulate, and with five healthy controls.

25. Possible Contrecoup injury with frontal lobe features (residual focal) Secondary sexual dysfunction BR> Secondary Pain syndrome predominantly hips Tinnitus chronically Abnormal EEG with right lateral temporal structural abnormality

26. 3 They compared her performance on a range of psychological tests with that of two patients with frontal lobe brain damage who don't confabulate, and with five healthy controls.

27. Three- dimensional play fires up the cerebellum, puts a lot of impulses into the frontal lobe -- the executive portion -- helps contextual memory be developed, and -- and, and, and.

28. The Arcuate fasciculus is a bundle of nerve fibers that connects the temporal and parietal lobes of the brain, known as the temporoparietal junction (TPJ), to the frontal lobe

29. Arcuate This location generally corresponded to the rostro-caudal level of the genu of the Arcuate sulcus. From the Cambridge English Corpus The skull was opened above the frontal lobe unilaterally …

30. Based on evidence from Autosomal Dominant NFLE, a genetic disorder with mutations in nicotinic acetylcholine receptors(nAchR), we hypothesise that arousal parasomnias and NFLE both, have abnormal arousal mechanisms in the dorsal cholinergic arousal branch triggering peculiar motor patterns in the medial frontal lobe regions.

31. Typical oral Automatisms of chewing and swallow- 11.5 mA at 7–10 seconds over electrode 11A and at 8.5 mA at 7– ing have been found to be more common in temporal lobe epilep- 10 seconds over electrode 16A, the intensity threshold for afterdis- sies; however, they may occur in frontal lobe seizures with charges being 12.5 and 9.5 mA

32. Seizures that originate in the temporal lobe (an area of the brain near the ears) are often preceded by Auras consisting of usual psychic experiences.; Seizures that originate the frontal lobe (the front portion of the brain) may begin with Auras that manifest with involuntary physical movements.; Seizures that originate in the parietal lobe (located at the top of the brain) may be preceded by