inferior rostral gyrus (RSGi)

The term inferior rostral gyrus refers to a convolution on the medial surface of the frontal lobe in the human ( Mai-1997 ). It and the superior rostral gyrus constitute the paraterminal gyrus. Defined topologically by dissection, it is bounded dorsally by an unnamed groove that separates it from the superior rostral gyrus. It is bounded ventrally by the rostral sulcus, which separates it from the straight gyrus. It is not found in the macaque where the comparable area ventral to the rostrum of the corpus callosum and rostral to the lamina terminalis is not distinguished from the anterior cingulate gyrus ( Martin-2000 ). Neither is it found in the smooth cerebral cortex of the rat or mouse ( NeuroNames ). Updated 11 Jun 2024.

Also known as: Gyrus rostralis inferior, inferior rostral gyrus

NeuroNames ID: 11

All Names & Sources

Showing 4 synonym(s)

Name:

Gyrus rostralis inferior

Language:

Latin

Organism:

human

Source:

Mai-1997

Citation:

San Diego: Academic Press, 1997

Source Title:

Atlas of the Human Brain

Name:

IRoG

Language:

acronym

Organism:

human

Source:

Mai-1997

Citation:

San Diego: Academic Press, 1997

Source Title:

Atlas of the Human Brain

Name:

inferior rostral gyrus

Language:

English

Organism:

human

Source:

Mai-1997

Citation:

San Diego: Academic Press, 1997

Source Title:

Atlas of the Human Brain

Name:

RSGi

Language:

acronym

Organism:

human

Source:

NeuroNames

Citation:

University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Source Title:

NeuroNames

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Species With The Structure
Equivalent By Human Macaque Rat Mouse
Topology Has The Structure Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located

Showing 1 record(s)

Basis:

Topology

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

inferior rostral gyrus

Source:

Mai-1997

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