The author suggests that the cerebrum appears "mixed up" because it processes a vast array of sensory information, memories, and thoughts simultaneously, often leading to confusion or disorganization. This complexity can result from the brain's attempts to integrate various inputs and experiences, which may not always align neatly. Additionally, the interplay of emotions and cognitive functions can further contribute to this perceived disarray. Overall, the statement highlights the intricate and sometimes chaotic nature of brain function.
No, that's prettymuch it. If you want to get technical, you could use "Cerebral Cortex" (which is not the entire brain, rather the vast majority of it). Depending on how formal the situation is, this will usually suffice.
They have different densities. If one liquid ( say water) is mixed with another that is lighter in density ( say oil) the lighter density will float on top. Try it!
Stupidity is mainly in the Cerebrum, which is located on the top of the brain and controls your thinking and judgment. Stupidity could not travel through the blood, since the Cerebrum is what controls the logic, not the blood. Although some say that your genes that are in the blood cells of your blood control stupidity, it is not true since the RBC's (red blood cells) are only using a specific amount of information from the DNA it has, and does not control any though processes. The brain is what controls your thought processes.
There are two differents part related with the functions your say. The motor part - come whit the Frontal lobe (motor, 4 in the Broadman map), but is necesary the actions of another parts like cerebellum (fine moves) and the conections between that. The memory is atribuited to Hipocampus, located in the limbic system, in the temporal lobe.
okay let's say your putting sugar into coffee the solute is the sugar and solvent is the coffee. The Solvent coffee dissolves the solute "sugar" homogeneously amongst the solution. So the answer to your question is the solvent does the dissolving
why does the author say that your cerebrum seems mixed up
This seems. This seems to be the right answer, doesn't it?
The cerebral cortex is the outer layer of the cerebrum, or large brain. It also is where most of the grey matter, i.e. neuronal cell bodies, are found. So you could say that the cerebral cortex covers the white matter of the cerebrum.
When checking in a load, what must be done with cases that say "Mixed" on them
A mixed fraction is a whole number and a fraction put together. So I would say that 1 is not a mixed number.
You say "ensalada mixta" or "ensalada mezclada".
il semble ...
seems legin means when people want to say real things ekc
I would Say mixed blue and green
18 over 11 as a mixed number = 17/11
Dit lyk vir my
when one mixture seems to melt away in a solution, we say it is what