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Superior frontal gyrus
Superior frontal gyrus of the human brain
Coronal section through anterior cornua of lateral ventricles. Superior frontal gyrus is shown as yellow.
Details
Part ofFrontal lobe
ArteryAnterior cerebral
Identifiers
Latingyrus frontalis superior
NeuroNames83
NeuroLex IDbirnlex_1303
TA98A14.1.09.121
TA25456
FMA61857
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

In neuroanatomy, the superior frontal gyrus (SFG, also marginal gyrus) is a gyrus – a ridge on the brain's cerebral cortex – which makes up about one third of the frontal lobe. It is bounded laterally by the superior frontal sulcus.[1]

The superior frontal gyrus is one of the frontal gyri.

Function

Self-awareness

In fMRI experiments, Goldberg et al. have found evidence that the superior frontal gyrus is involved in self-awareness, in coordination with the action of the sensory system.[2][3]

Laughter

In 1998, neurosurgeon Itzhak Fried described a 16-year-old female patient (referred to as "patient AK") who laughed when her SFG was stimulated with electric current during treatment for epilepsy.[4] Electrical stimulation was applied to the cortical surface of AK's left frontal lobe while an attempt was made to locate the focus of her epileptic seizures (which were never accompanied by laughter).

Fried identified a 2 cm by 2 cm area on the left SFG where stimulation produced laughter consistently (over several trials). AK reported that the laughter was accompanied by a sensation of merriment or mirth. AK gave a different explanation for the laughter each time, attributing it to an (unfunny) external stimulus. Thus, laughter was attributed to the picture she was asked to name (saying "the horse is funny"), or to the sentence she was asked to read, or to persons present in the room ("you guys are just so funny... standing around").

Increasing the level of stimulation current increased the duration and intensity of laughter. For example, at low currents only a smile was present, while at higher currents a louder, contagious laughter was induced. The laughter was also accompanied by the stopping of all activities involving speech or hand movements.

Additional images

References

  1. ^ "BrainInfo". braininfo.rprc.washington.edu.
  2. ^ Goldberg I, Harel M, Malach R (2006). "When the brain loses its self: prefrontal inactivation during sensorimotor processing". Neuron. 50 (2): 329–39. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2006.03.015. PMID 16630842.
  3. ^ Watching the brain 'switch off' self-awareness at newscientist.com
  4. ^ Fried I, Wilson C, MacDonald K, Behnke E (1998). "Electric current stimulates laughter". Nature. 391 (6668): 650. doi:10.1038/35536. PMID 9490408.