Significant prominence of the sulci, gyri and fissures are indicative of a probable dementia process (such as Alzheimer's type, vascular type and many others). However, further testing would be needed to confirm this - and this type of testing is best done by a neuropsychologist (including interview, and several pencil and paper type tests).
the sylvian fissures divide the parietal lobe from the temporal lobe.
The Sylvian fissures are deep grooves in the cortex of the brain. They allow the Thebrain to be folded so more brain tissue can fit into the brain case. The Sylvian fissure is the deepest and most discernible of all the brains fissures. It is the lateral groove that divides the lobes of the human brain, in effect dividing the top and bottom of the brain. At the front of the brain it separates the frontal lobe from the temporal lobe, whilst at the back of the brain it separates the temporal lobe from the parietal lobe.
tuberculoma
a sylvian fissure is one of the parts of the brain and we spell it s y l v i a n f i s s u r e i thank you =)
The Sylvian fissure and central sulcus.
The Sylvian fissure and central sulcus.
frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, temporal lobe, sylvian or lateral fissure, central sulcus. They are made up of greyish-white matter
David Sylvian was born on February 23, 1958.
David Sylvian was born on February 23, 1958.
David Sylvian is 59 years old (birthdate: February 23, 1958).
Gone to Earth - David Sylvian album - was created in 1985.
The most prominent division would be the "longitudinal fissure", which is that big line in the middle running anterior-posterior to the cerebral cortex. It was created before birth to give room to blood vessels to feed theWhen you dissect a brain you'll see those 2 sides connected by what looks like connective tissue, this tissue criss-crosses the nerves from back-to-front, meaning if you focus with your right eye, the message would be sent to the left back part of you brain. The second would be the the parieto-occipital sulcus, which really doesn't divide the brain but is constituted as a space in between, like a cave if you must. Another would be those to temporal lobes that pop out to the sides of the brain, looks like a helmet piece. Those are divided by the "lateral sulcus", your ears would be closest to it. The "transverse fissure" divides the cerebellum from the cerebrum. It runs all around the lower-back(inferior-posterior) part of the cerebrum. The pons look like balls, sits over the medulla oblongata which is the beginning of the brain stem(spinal cord). Gross fact: If you're a dude this might look familiar. -This is just the exterior stuff. Hope this helps