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Embryonic vertebrate subdivisions of the developing human brain hindbrain or rhombencephalon is a developmental categorization of portions of the central nervous system in vertebrates. It includes the medulla , pons , and cerebellum .
The human brain is the central organ of the nervous system, and with the spinal cord, comprises the central nervous system. It consists of the cerebrum, the brainstem and the cerebellum. The brain controls most of the activities of the body, processing, integrating, and coordinating the information it receives from the sensory nervous system ...
664968 Ensembl ENSG00000233493 ENSMUSG00000030431 UniProt C9JI98 A9JSM3 RefSeq (mRNA) NM_001190764 NM_029384 RefSeq (protein) NP_001177693 NP_083660 Location (UCSC) Chr 19: 55.38 – 55.38 Mb Chr 7: 4.79 – 4.79 Mb PubMed search Wikidata View/Edit Human View/Edit Mouse Transmembrane protein 238 is a transmembrane protein that in humans is encoded by the TMEM238 gene. The Homo sapiens TMEM238 ...
Human brain – central organ of the nervous system located in the head of a human being . Neuroanatomy; Regions in the human brain: . Cerebrum. Cerebral cortex. Frontal lobe ...
The central nervous system (CNS) is the part of the nervous system consisting primarily of the brain and spinal cord.The CNS is so named because the brain integrates the received information and coordinates and influences the activity of all parts of the bodies of bilaterally symmetric and triploblastic animals—that is, all multicellular animals except sponges and diploblasts.
The temporal lobes are a region of the cerebral cortex that is located beneath the Sylvian fissure on both the left and right hemispheres of the brain. [14] Lobes in this cortex are more closely associated with memory and in particular autobiographical memory. [15] The temporal lobes are also concerned with recognition memory.
A Brodmann area is a region of the cerebral cortex, in the human or other primate brain, defined by its cytoarchitecture, or histological structure and organization of cells. The concept was first introduced by the German anatomist Korbinian Brodmann in the early 20th century.
The cerebral cortex, also known as the cerebral mantle, [1] is the outer layer of neural tissue of the cerebrum of the brain in humans and other mammals.It is the largest site of neural integration in the central nervous system, [2] and plays a key role in attention, perception, awareness, thought, memory, language, and consciousness.