| Brain: Prosencephalon |
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| Diagram depicting the main subdivisions of the embryonic vertebrate brain. These regions will later differentiate into forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain structures. |
In the anatomy of the brain of vertebrates, the prosencephalon (or forebrain) is the rostral-most (forward-most) portion of the brain. The prosencephalon, the mesencephalon (midbrain), and rhombencephalon (hindbrain) are the three primary portions of the brain during early development of the central nervous system. It controls body temperature, reproductive functions, eating, sleeping, and any display of emotions.
At the five-vesicle stage, the prosencephalon separates into the diencephalon (prethalamus, thalamus, hypothalamus, subthalamus, epithalamus, and pretectum) and the telencephalon (cerebrum). The cerebrum consists of the cerebral cortex, underlying white matter, and the basal ganglia.
When the embryonic prosencephalon fails to divide the brain into two lobes, it results in a condition known as holoprosencephaly.
Additional images
Embryo between eighteen and twenty-one days.
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Head of chick embryo of about thirty-eight hours’ incubation, viewed from the ventral surface. X 26
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See also
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Brain: telencephalon (cerebrum, cerebral cortex, cerebral hemispheres) |
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| Frontal lobe |
Precentral gyrus ( Primary motor cortex, 4)
Superior frontal gyrus/Frontal eye fields (6, 8, 9), Middle frontal gyrus (46), Inferior frontal gyrus/Broca's area (44-Pars opercularis, 45-Pars triangularis)
Orbitofrontal cortex (10, 11, 12, 47)
Prefrontal cortex, Premotor cortex
Precentral sulcus - Superior frontal sulcus - Inferior frontal sulcus - Olfactory sulcus
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| Parietal lobe |
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| Occipital lobe |
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| Temporal lobe |
Primary auditory cortex ( 41, 42), Superior temporal gyrus ( 38, 22/ Wernicke's area), Middle temporal gyrus ( 21), Inferior temporal gyrus ( 20)
Fusiform gyrus ( 37) Medial temporal lobe ( Amygdala, Parahippocampal gyrus ( 27, 28, 34, 35, 36)
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| Cingulate cortex/gyrus |
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| Interlobar sulci/fissures |
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| White matter tracts |
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| Other |
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| Some categorizations are approximations, and some Brodmann areas span gyri. |
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