It's greater in humans- which allows us to have more folding- therefore having more thinking capabilities compared to that of a sheep.
Hope I helped! :)
The hemispheres of the human brain are larger.
The relative size of the cerebral hemispheres are much bigger in humans than in sheep, though sheeps brain share many a similar quality to those of humans in the hemisphere aspect.
The cerebral hemispheres account for about 83% of total brain mass.
Cerebral hemispheres of the brain
Either Cerebral Specialization, cerebral localisation, cerebral asymmetry, hemispheric specialisatio.
Corpus Callosum is the fibre connecting the cerebral hemisphere of the brain
The brain has a left cerebral hemisphere and a right cerebral hemisphere, as well as a stem.
The transverse fissure.
The cerebral hemispheres are connected by the corpus callosum.
The cerebral hemispheres account for about 83% of total brain mass.
Cerebral hemispheres of the brain
Either Cerebral Specialization, cerebral localisation, cerebral asymmetry, hemispheric specialisatio.
There is one major fissure that divides the cerebral hemispheres, called the longitudinal fissure. It separates the left and right hemispheres of the brain.
The corpus collasum.
Corpus Callosum is the fibre connecting the cerebral hemisphere of the brain
The right and left cerebral hemispheres make up the main part of the brain, called the cerebrum, at the top, front, sides, and part of the back of the brain, and accounts for the majority of the brain's volume.The thin outer layer of the cerebrum is called the cerebral cortex, and is where cognition and long-term memory occur.
The corpus callosum is a structure that connects the two cerebral hemispheres of the brain, allowing them to communicate and share information. It facilitates the transfer of information between the left and right hemispheres, which is important for coordinated brain function and the integration of sensory and motor signals.
yes!
The brain has a left cerebral hemisphere and a right cerebral hemisphere, as well as a stem.