Frontal Lobe - GCSE Psychology Definition

Reviewed by: Raj Bonsor

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The frontal lobe is a part of the brain located at the front of your head, just behind your forehead. It plays a crucial role in controlling important skills like thinking, planning, problem-solving, and decision-making. This area of the brain is also involved in controlling your movements and helps regulate emotions and behaviour.

For example, when you decide to raise your hand in class or think about the best way to tackle a homework question, your frontal lobe is hard at work. Understanding how the frontal lobe functions can help you study how people think and act, which is an important part of GCSE Psychology.

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Raj Bonsor

Reviewer: Raj Bonsor

Expertise: Psychology & Sociology Content Creator

Raj joined Save My Exams in 2024 as a Senior Content Creator for Psychology & Sociology. Prior to this, she spent fifteen years in the classroom, teaching hundreds of GCSE and A Level students. She has experience as Subject Leader for Psychology and Sociology, and her favourite topics to teach are research methods (especially inferential statistics!) and attachment. She has also successfully taught a number of Level 3 subjects, including criminology, health & social care, and citizenship.

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