|
DIENCEPHALON: third ventricle, interventricular foramina, optic chiasm
epithalamus: pineal body, habenula, habenular nuclei
hypothalamus: anterior (paraventricular nucleus, supraoptic nucleus, suprachiasmatic nucleus), intermediate (pituitary gland, anterior pituitary, posterior pituitary, infundibulum, median eminence, arcuate nucleus, ventromedial nucleus), posterior (posterior nucleus, mammillary body)
subthalamus: zona incerta, subthalamic nucleus
thalamus: pulvinar, medial geniculate nucleus, lateral geniculate nucleus, thalamic reticular nucleus
TELENCEPHALON: cerebral cortex, cerebral hemispheres, primary sensory areas, primary sulci(lateral, central, medial longitudinal fissure)
frontal lobe: superior frontal gyrus(6, 8), middle frontal gyrus(Broca's area, prefrontal cortex, 44, 45, 46), inferior frontal gyrus(pars opercularis, 11, 47), orbitofrontal cortex(9, 10), precentral gyrus(primary motor cortex, 4), precentral sulcus
temporal lobe: superior temporal gyrus(38, 22-Wernicke's area, 41-42-primary auditory cortex), transverse temporal gyrus, middle temporal gyrus(21), inferior temporal gyrus(37), fusiform gyrus(20),
parietal lobe: postcentral gyrus(1, 2, 3), superior parietal lobule(5), inferior parietal lobule(39, 40), precuneus(7), postcentral sulcus
occipital lobe: primary visual cortex(17), cuneus, 18, 19
fornicate gyrus: parahippocampal gyrus(piriform cortex, entorhinal cortex, 25, 27, 34, 35, 36), cingulate cortex/cingulate gyrus, anterior cingulate(24, 32, 33), posterior cingulate(23, 26, 29, 30, 31), cingulate sulcus
subcortical/insular cortex: hippocampus(dentate gyrus, cornu ammonis, subiculum), basal ganglia (amygdala, striatum, globus pallidus, caudate nucleus, lentiform nucleus, putamen, claustrum, nucleus accumbens), rhinencephalon, olfactory bulb, lateral ventricles
neural pathways: arcuate fasciculus, corpus callosum, corticospinal tract, corona radiata, dopamine pathways (mesocortical, mesolimbic, nigrostriatal, tuberoinfundibular), capsules (external, extreme, internal)
Some categorizations are approximations, and some Brodmann areas span gyri.
|