The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the human brain:
This development section covers changes in brain structure over time. It includes both the normal development of the human brain from infant to adult and genetic and evolutionary changes over many generations.
This section covers typical brain function as opposed to atypical function discussed below.
Integration and cognition
- Sleep
- Neuroscience of sleep – the study of the neuroscientific and physiological basis of the nature of sleep and its functions
- Sleep and memory – memory processes have been shown to be stabilized and sped up by sleep. Certain sleep stages are noted to improve an individual's memory.
- Microsleep – an episode of sleep lasting from fraction of a second to thirty seconds
- Dreaming
- Abstraction – a process by which concepts are derived from the usage and classification of literal concepts
- Imagination – the ability to form new images and sensations that are not perceived through sight, hearing, or other senses
- Wakefulness
- Attention
- Mindfulness
Executive function
- Supervisory attentional system – higher level system involved with elements of planning, inhibition, and abstraction of logical rules
- Metastability in the brain – the ability to make sense out of seemingly random environmental cues
- Neuroscience of free will – some actions are initiated and processed unconsciously at first, and only consciousnessly afterward
- Neuroeconomics – studying human decision making using techniques from neuroscience, psychology, and economics
- Neurophilosophy – exploration of the relevance of neuroscientific studies to the arguments traditionally categorized as philosophy of mind
- Neural basis of self – using modern concepts of neuroscience to describe a human's perception of self-understanding
- Mentalism (psychology) – branches of study that concentrate on mental perception and thought processes
- Animal cognition
- Lying
- Lie detection – questioning techniques and technologies to discern truth from falsehood
Motor output and behavior
- Motor skill – a learned sequence of movements that combine to produce a smooth, efficient action to master a particular task
- Muscle memory – the retention in the brain of memories of certain muscle movements, often enabling those specific movement to be duplicated in the future
- Behavioral neuroscience
Sexuality, sex differences, and gender differences
This section covers the major known deviations from typical brain functioning with an emphasis on the resulting magnitude of overall human suffering.
- Neurodegeneration – progressive loss of structure or function of neurons, including death of neurons
- Multiple sclerosis – inflammatory disease in which the myelin sheaths around the axons of the brain and spinal cord are damaged.
- Parkinson's disease – disease causing shaking, rigidity, slowness of movement and difficulty with walking and gait, followed by cognitive and behavioral problems and dementia
- Alzheimer's disease – the most common form of dementia, causing memory loss
- Huntington's disease – mutation in the huntingtin gene causing abnormal involuntary writhing movements, cognitive decline and psychiatric problems
- Dementia – abnormal loss of global cognitive ability in a previously unimpaired person
- Brain cancer
- Brain metastasis – cancer that has spread to the brain from another location in the body
- Tuberous sclerosis – genetic disease that causes non-malignant tumors to grow in the brain and on other vital organs
- Brain damage
- Drug
- Gambler's fallacy – a cognitive bias and fallacy that arises out the erroneous belief that small samples must be representative of the larger population
- Mental disorder
- Acalculia – decrease in cognitive capacity for calculation resulting from damage to the brain
- CCK-4 – compound that reliably causes severe anxiety symptoms when administered to humans, commonly used in scientific research to induce panic attacks
- Thalamocortical radiations – fibers between the thalamus and the cerebral cortex, associated with activity which causes symptoms associated with impulse control disorders, Parkinson's disease, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and other forms of chronic psychosis
- Treatment of mental disorders – treatments frequently mentioning brain dysfunction
- Epileptic seizure – transient symptom of abnormal excessive or hypersynchronous neuronal activity in the brain
This section covers attempts to physically alter the brain state to relieve suffering, address atypical functioning or improve performance.