Any Words in the Brain’s Language? Tatiana V. Chernigovskaya ()
... additional activation in the left frontal operculum when syntactically plausible non-word pseudosentences were processed. According to the other fMRI study (Homae et al., 2002), activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus, relevant to sentence processing, appears to be sensory modality independent ...
... additional activation in the left frontal operculum when syntactically plausible non-word pseudosentences were processed. According to the other fMRI study (Homae et al., 2002), activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus, relevant to sentence processing, appears to be sensory modality independent ...
HYPOPHYSIS CEREBRI ( PITUITARY GLAND )
... PITUITARY GLAND Objectives: By the end of this lecture, the student should be able to describe 1. The microscopic structure of the different parts of the pituitary gland in correlation with their functions. 2. The hypophyseal portal circulation; components and significance. ...
... PITUITARY GLAND Objectives: By the end of this lecture, the student should be able to describe 1. The microscopic structure of the different parts of the pituitary gland in correlation with their functions. 2. The hypophyseal portal circulation; components and significance. ...
Brodmann area 45
Brodmann area 45 (BA45), is part of the frontal cortex in the human brain. Situated on the lateral surface, inferior to BA9 and adjacent to BA46.This area is also known as pars triangularis (of the inferior frontal gyrus). In the human, it occupies the triangular part of inferior frontal gyrus (H) and, surrounding the anterior horizontal limb of lateral sulcus (H), a portion of the orbital part of inferior frontal gyrus (H). Bounded caudally by the anterior ascending limb of lateral sulcus (H), it borders on the insula in the depth of the lateral sulcus.In terms of cytoarchitecture, it is bounded caudally by the opercular area 44 (BA44), rostrodorsally by the middle frontal area 46 (BA46), and ventrally by the orbital area 47 (BA47) (Brodmann, 1909).