If you were to unfold the cortex of the human brain, it would cover about 2.5 to 2.7 square feet (almost 0.25 square meters). This large surface area allows for the intricate folding and wrinkling that gives the brain the capacity to process and interpret vast amounts of information.
Feel with your fingers the "space" in the center of the back of your neck at the base of the skull. The cerebral cortex is directly above that.
The cerebral cortex is the outer covering of the cerebral hemisphere.
The two kinds of cortex are the cerebral cortex and the adrenal cortex. The cerebral cortex is the outer layer of the brain involved in higher brain functions, while the adrenal cortex is the outer portion of the adrenal gland responsible for producing hormones like cortisol and aldosterone.
cortex
The cerebral cortex is typically divided into four functional divisions: the motor cortex, sensory cortex, association cortex, and visual cortex. Each division plays a specific role in processing different types of information and functions within the brain.
You would say the story's event unfolded
cortex
"unfolded" is the simple predicate. "unfolded a large quilt" is the complete predicate.
The primary motor cortex controls voluntary movements. Damage to the primary cortex would impact the ability to control voluntary movement.
Your answer is unfolded Imagine it like this "many times I have UNFOLDED a shirt".
The Frontal Cortex
it would be found in the cortex of a root.
Adrenal cortex
Feel with your fingers the "space" in the center of the back of your neck at the base of the skull. The cerebral cortex is directly above that.
You would not find cell bodies of neurons in the cerebral cortex. Instead, the cerebral cortex mainly contains the axons, dendrites, and synapses of neurons, as well as glial cells that provide support and function.
All elements have energy levels, but they are never described as unfolded. The energy levels are like layers, similar to how a gobstopper has different layers of color. They cannot be unfolded.
The ovaries and the adrenal cortex (part of the adrenal gland, superior to the kidneys) are major sources of testosterone for women.