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TTDaemonCards.json
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TTDaemonCards.json
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"The anterior commissure (also known as the precommissure) is a white matter tract (a bundle of axons) connecting the two temporal lobes of the cerebral hemispheres across the midline, and placed in front of the columns of the fornix. The great majority of fibers connecting the two hemispheres travel through the corpus callosum, which is over 10 times larger than the anterior commissure, and other routes of communication pass through the hippocampal commissure or, indirectly, via subcortical connections. Nevertheless, the anterior commissure is a significant pathway that can be clearly distinguished in the brains of all mammals.\n\nThe anterior commissure plays a key role in pain sensation, more specifically sharp, acute pain. It also contains decussating fibers from the olfactory tracts, vital for the sense of smell and chemoreception. The anterior commissure works with the posterior commissure to link the two cerebral hemispheres of the brain and also interconnects the amygdalae and temporal lobes, contributing to the role of memory, emotion, speech and hearing. It also is involved in olfaction, instinct, and sexual behavior.\n\nIn a sagittal section, the anterior commissure is oval in shape, having a long vertical axis that measures about 5 mm."
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"The posterior commissure (also known as the epithalamic commissure) is a rounded band of white fibers crossing the middle line on the dorsal aspect of the upper end of the cerebral aqueduct. It is important in the bilateral pupillary light reflex.\n\nIts fibers acquire their medullary sheaths early, but their connections have not been definitively determined. Most of them have their origin in a nucleus, the nucleus of the posterior commissure (nucleus of Darkschewitsch), which lies in the central gray substance of the upper end of the cerebral aqueduct, in front of the oculomotor nucleus. Some are probably derived from the posterior part of the thalamus and from the superior colliculus, whereas others are believed to be continued downward into the medial longitudinal fasciculus.\n\nThe posterior commissure interconnects the pretectal nuclei, mediating the consensual pupillary light reflex."
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"The amygdala (; plural: amygdalae; also corpus amygdaloideum; Latin from Greek, ἀμυγδαλή, amygdalē, 'Almond', 'tonsil') is one of two almond-shaped groups of nuclei located deep and medially within the temporal lobes of the brain in complex vertebrates, including humans. Shown in research to perform a primary role in the processing of memory, decision-making and emotional responses (including fear, anxiety, and aggression), the amygdalae are considered part of the limbic system."
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"The angular gyrus is a region of the brain lying mainly in the anterolateral region of parietal lobe, that lies near the superior edge of the temporal lobe, and immediately posterior to the supramarginal gyrus. Its significance is in transferring visual information to Wernicke's area, in order to make meaning out of visually perceived words. It is also involved in a number of processes related to language, number processing and spatial cognition, memory retrieval, attention, and theory of mind. It is Brodmann area 39 of the human brain."
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"Redirected from %s to %s\n\nCaudate headCaudate nucleusThe caudate nucleus is one of the structures that make up the dorsal striatum, which is a component of the basal ganglia. While the caudate nucleus has long been associated with motor processes due to its role in Parkinson's disease, it plays important roles in various other nonmotor functions as well, including procedural learning, associative learning and inhibitory control of action, \n\n among other functions. The caudate is also one of the brain structures which compose the reward system and functions as part of the cortico–basal ganglia–thalamic loop."
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"The caudate nucleus is one of the structures that make up the dorsal striatum, which is a component of the basal ganglia. While the caudate nucleus has long been associated with motor processes due to its role in Parkinson's disease, it plays important roles in various other nonmotor functions as well, including procedural learning, associative learning and inhibitory control of action, \n\n among other functions. The caudate is also one of the brain structures which compose the reward system and functions as part of the cortico–basal ganglia–thalamic loop."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerebellar_tonsil",
"The cerebellar tonsil is analogous to a rounded lobule on the undersurface of each cerebellar hemisphere, continuous medially with the uvula of the cerebellar vermis and superiorly by the flocculonodular lobe. Synonyms include: tonsilla cerebelli, amygdala cerebelli, the latter of which is not to be confused with the cerebral tonsils or amygdala nuclei located deep within the medial temporal lobes of the cerebral cortex. The flocculonodular lobe of the cerebellum which can also be confused for the cerebellar tonsils, is one of three lobes that make up the overall composition of the cerebellum. The cerebellum consists of three anatomical and functional lobes: anterior lobe, posterior lobe, and flocculonodular lobe.\n\nElongation of the cerebellar tonsils can, due to pressure, lead to this portion of the cerebellum to slip or be pushed through the foramen magnum of the skull resulting in tonsillar herniation. This is a life-threatening condition as it causes increased pressure on the medulla oblongata which contains respiratory and cardiac control centres."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cingulate_cortex",
"Redirected from %s to %s\n\nCingulate gyrusCingulate cortexThe cingulate cortex is a part of the brain situated in the medial aspect of the cerebral cortex. The cingulate cortex includes the entire cingulate gyrus, which lies immediately above the corpus callosum, and the continuation of this in the cingulate sulcus. The cingulate cortex is usually considered part of the limbic lobe.\n\nIt receives inputs from the thalamus and the neocortex, and projects to the entorhinal cortex via the cingulum. It is an integral part of the limbic system, which is involved with emotion formation and processing, learning, and memory. The combination of these three functions makes the cingulate gyrus highly influential in linking behavioral outcomes to motivation (e.g. a certain action induced a positive emotional response, which results in learning). This role makes the cingulate cortex highly important in disorders such as depression and schizophrenia. It also plays a role in executive function and respiratory control."
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"Claustrum",
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claustrum",
"The claustrum is a thin, irregular sheet of neurons that is attached to the underside of the neocortex in the center of the brain. It is suspected to be present in the brains of all mammals.\n\nThe claustrum in the human brain is a fraction of a millimetre to a few millimetres thick and is a vertical curved sheet of subcortical gray matter oriented sagittally between the white matter tracts of the external capsule and extreme capsule. The claustrum is lateral to the putamen and medial to the insular cortex and is considered by some sources to be part of the basal ganglia. There are lateral and medial tracts connecting the claustrum to many parts of the cortex and perhaps to the hippocampus, the amygdala, and the caudate nucleus (connections with subcortical centers are a matter of debate).\n\nThe claustrum has a uniformity in its types of cells, indicating a uniform type of processing by all claustral neurons. Though organized into modality specific regions, the claustrum contains a great deal of longitudinal connections between its neurons that could serve to synchronize the entire anterior-posterior extent of the claustrum. Francis Crick and Christof Koch have compared the claustrum to the conductor of an orchestra, referring to its regulatory role in consciousness and cognition. The different parts of the cortex must play in harmony or else the result is a cacophony of sounds. The claustrum may be involved in widespread coordination of the cerebral cortex, using synchronization to achieve a seamless timescale between both the two cortical hemispheres and between cortical regions within the same hemisphere, resulting in the seamless quality of conscious experience."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culmen",
"A culmen is a top, a summit or a culminating point. It may also refer to:\n\n\n\nCulmen (bird), the upper ridge of a bird's beak\n\nCulmen (cerebellum), a structure in the brain"
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dentate",
"Dentate may refer to:\n\n\n\nA species having dentition\n\nAn energy-dissipating baffle block in a spillway\n\nAn individual not being edentulous\n\nDentate gyrus of the hippocampus\n\nDentate nucleus of the cerebellum\n\nDenticity in chemistry\n\nDentate leaf, a kind of leaf margin"
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"Redirected from %s to %s\n\nFastigiumFourth ventricleThe fourth ventricle is one of the four connected fluid-filled cavities within the human brain. These cavities, known collectively as the ventricular system, consist of the left and right lateral ventricles, the third ventricle, and the fourth ventricle. The fourth ventricle extends from the cerebral aqueduct (aqueduct of Sylvius) to the obex, and is filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).\n\nThe fourth ventricle has a characteristic diamond shape in cross-sections of the human brain. It is located within the pons or in the upper part of the medulla. CSF entering the fourth ventricle through the cerebral aqueduct can exit to the subarachnoid space of the spinal cord through two lateral apertures and a single, midline median aperture."
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"The fusiform gyrus, also known as the (discontinuous) occipitotemporal gyrus, is part of the temporal lobe and occipital lobe in Brodmann area 37. The fusiform gyrus is located between the lingual gyrus and parahippocampal gyrus above, and the inferior temporal gyrus below. Though the functionality of the fusiform gyrus is not fully understood, it has been linked with various neural pathways related to recognition. Additionally, it has been linked to various neurological phenomena such as synesthesia, dyslexia, and prosopagnosia."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_frontal_gyrus",
"The inferior frontal gyrus is a part of the frontal gyrus of the frontal lobe (the yellow area of the human brain image to the right). It is labelled gyrus frontalis inferior, its Latin name. In the yellow area, its superior border is the inferior frontal sulcus (which divides it from the gyrus frontalis medius in the yellow area), its inferior border the lateral fissure (which divides it from the gyrus temporalis superior in the green area), and its posterior border is the inferior precentral sulcus (in the yellow area). Above it is the middle frontal gyrus (the gyrus frontalis medius), behind it the precentral gyrus (the gyrus praecentralis), both gyri in the yellow area of the image.The inferior frontal gyrus, like the medial frontal gyrus, middle frontal gyrus and the superior frontal gyrus, is more of a region of the frontal gyrus than a true gyrus."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_parietal_lobule",
"The inferior parietal lobule (subparietal district) lies below the horizontal portion of the intraparietal sulcus, and behind the lower part of the postcentral sulcus. Also known as Geschwind’s territory after Norman Geschwind, an American neurologist, who in the early 1960s foresaw its importance."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_temporal_gyrus",
"The inferior temporal gyrus is placed below the middle temporal gyrus, and is connected behind with the inferior occipital gyrus; it also extends around the infero-lateral border on to the inferior surface of the temporal lobe, where it is limited by the inferior sulcus. This region is one of the higher levels of the ventral stream of visual processing, associated with the representation of complex object features, such as global shape. It may also be involved in face perception, and in the recognition of numbers.The inferior temporal gyrus is the anterior region of the temporal lobe located underneath the central temporal sulcus. The primary function of the occipital temporal gyrus – otherwise referenced as IT cortex – is associated with visual stimuli processing, namely visual object recognition, and has been suggested by recent experimental results as the final location of the ventral cortical visual system. The IT cortex in humans is also known as the Inferior Temporal Gyrus since it has been located to a specific region of the human temporal lobe. The IT processes visual stimuli of objects in our field of vision, and is involved with memory and memory recall to identify that object; it is involved with the processing and perception created by visual stimuli amplified in the V1, V2, V3, and V4 regions of the occipital lobe. This region processes the color and form of the object in the visual field and is responsible for producing the “what” from this visual stimuli, or in other words identifying the object based on the color and form of the object and comparing that processed information to stored memories of objects to identify that object.The IT cortex’s neurological significance is not just its contribution to the processing of visual stimuli in object recognition but also has been found to be a vital area with regards to simple processing of the visual field, difficulties with perceptual tasks and spatial awareness, and the location of unique single cells that possibly explain the IT cortex’s relation to memory."
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insula",
"Insula is the Latin word for \\island\\\" and may refer to:"
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"Lateral Dorsal Nucleus",
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_dorsal_nucleus_of_thalamus",
"Redirected from %s to %s\n\nLateral dorsal nucleusLateral dorsal nucleus of thalamusThe lateral dorsal nucleus is a nucleus of the thalamus.\n\nIt acts in concert with the anterior nuclei of thalamus.\n\nIt receives significant input from several subdivisions of visual cortex, and has a primary output to parietal cortex on the dorsolateral cortical convexity, giving it access to limbic forebrain nuclei important for emotion and behavior functions."
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"Lateral Geniculum Body",
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"Lateral Posterior Nucleus",
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"<img src='Right_Lateral_Posterior_Nucleus.sag.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Lateral_Posterior_Nucleus.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_posterior_nucleus_of_thalamus",
"Redirected from %s to %s\n\nLateral posterior nucleusLateral posterior nucleus of thalamusThe lateral posterior nucleus is a nucleus of the thalamus.\n\nIt acts in concert with the pulvinar."
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"Lentiform Nucleus",
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"<img src='Right_Lentiform_Nucleus.sag.jpg'/>",
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"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lentiform_nucleus",
"The lentiform nucleus or lenticular nucleus comprises the putamen and the globus pallidus within the basal ganglia. With the caudate nucleus it forms the striatum. It is a large, lens-shaped mass of gray matter just lateral to the internal capsule."
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"Lingual Gyrus",
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"<img src='Right_Lingual_Gyrus.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingual_gyrus",
"The lingual gyrus is a brain structure that is linked to processing vision, especially related to letters. It is thought to also play a role in analysis of logical conditions (i.e. logical order of events) and encoding visual memories. The lingual gyrus is named after the shape it most closely resembles—the tongue. It is believed that a hypermetabolism of the lingual gyrus is associated with visual snow. Contrary to the name, the region has little to do with speech."
],
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"fields": [
"Mammillary Body",
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"<img src='Right_Mammillary_Body.sag.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Mammillary_Body.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammillary_body",
"The mammillary bodies are a pair of small round bodies, located on the undersurface of the brain that, as part of the diencephalon, form part of the limbic system. They are located at the ends of the anterior arches of the fornix. They consist of two groups of nuclei, the medial mammillary nuclei and the lateral mammillary nuclei.Neuroanatomists have often categorized the mammillary bodies as part of the hypothalamus."
],
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"Medial Dorsal Nucleus",
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"<img src='Right_Medial_Dorsal_Nucleus.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medial_dorsal_nucleus",
"The medial dorsal nucleus (or dorsomedial nucleus of thalamus) is a large nucleus in the thalamus.\n\nIt is believed to play a role in memory."
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"Medial Frontal Gyrus",
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"<img src='Right_Medial_Frontal_Gyrus.axi.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Medial_Frontal_Gyrus.sag.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Medial_Frontal_Gyrus.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medial_frontal_gyrus",
"The superior frontal gyrus is situated above the superior frontal sulcus and is continued on to the medial surface of the hemisphere, the medial frontal gyrus. The medial and superior frontal gyri are both regions of the frontal gyrus. The portion on the lateral surface of the hemisphere is usually more or less completely subdivided into an upper and a lower part by an antero-posterior sulcus, the paramedial sulcus, which, however, is frequently interrupted by bridging gyri.\n\nThere is some evidence that it plays a role in executive mechanisms."
],
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"fields": [
"Medial Geniculum Body",
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"<img src='Right_Medial_Geniculum_Body.sag.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Medial_Geniculum_Body.cor.jpg'/>",
"",
"Create it on: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medial_geniculum_body"
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"fields": [
"Medial Globus Pallidus",
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"<img src='Right_Medial_Globus_Pallidus.axi.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Medial_Globus_Pallidus.sag.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Medial_Globus_Pallidus.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_globus_pallidus",
"Redirected from %s to %s\n\nMedial globus pallidusInternal globus pallidusThe internal globus pallidus (GPi) (or medial globus pallidus) and the external globus pallidus (GPe) make up the globus pallidus. The GPi is one of the output nuclei of the basal ganglia (the other being the substantia nigra pars reticulata). The GABAergic neurons send their axons to the ventral anterior nucleus (VA) and the ventral lateral nucleus (VL) in the dorsal thalamus, to the centromedian complex, and to the pedunculopontine complex.The efferent bundle is constituted first of the ansa and lenticular fasciculus, then crosses the internal capsule as the Edinger's comb system then arrives at the laterosuperior corner of the subthalamic nucleus and constitutes the field H2 of Forel, then H, and suddenly changes its direction to form field H1 that goes to the inferior part of the thalamus. The distribution of axonal islands is widespread in the lateral region of the thalamus. The innervation of the central region is done by collaterals.The internal globus pallidus contains GABAergic neurons, which allow for its inhibitory function. As the GPi, along with the substantia nigra pars reticulata, forms the output of the basal ganglia, these neurons extend to the thalamus, the centromedian complex and the pedunculopontine complex."
],
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"fields": [
"Middle Frontal Gyrus",
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"<img src='Right_Middle_Frontal_Gyrus.axi.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Middle_Frontal_Gyrus.sag.jpg'/>",
"<img src='Right_Middle_Frontal_Gyrus.cor.jpg'/>",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_frontal_gyrus",
"The middle frontal gyrus makes up about one-third of the frontal lobe of the human brain. (A gyrus is one of the prominent \\bumps\\\" or \\\"ridges\\\" on the surface of the human brain.)"
],
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