CORTEX vs CORTICAL: NOUN
- The tissue forming the outer layer of an organ or structure in plant or animal
- The outer layer of an internal organ or body structure, as of the kidney or adrenal gland.
- The outer layer of gray matter that covers the surface of the cerebral hemisphere.
- The region of tissue in a root or stem lying between the epidermis and the vascular tissue.
- An external layer, such as bark or rind.
- The peridium of fungi.
- In botany: Bark, as of a tree. See bark.
- In Chara and some algæ, a covering of tubular or other cells inclosing the axis; in lichens, the cortical layer (which see, under cortical).
- Specifically, in medicine, Peruvian bark.
- In anatomy and zoology, some part or structure likened to bark or rind; cortical substance: as, the coriex of the brain.
- Bark, as of a tree; hence, an outer covering.
- Bark; rind; specifically, cinchona bark.
- The outer or superficial part of an organ.
- The tissue of a stem or root that lies inward from the epidermis, but exterior to the vascular tissue.
- The tissue that surrounds the lens nucleus
- The layer of unmyelinated neurons (the gray matter) forming the cortex of the cerebrum
- N/A
CORTEX vs CORTICAL: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Pertaining to the cortex of a stem or root—the tissue that lies inward from the epidermis, but exterior to the vascular tissue.
- Pertaining to the outer layer of an internal organ or body structure, such as the kidney or the brain.
- Of, relating to, associated with, or depending on the cerebral cortex.
- Of, relating to, derived from, or consisting of cortex.
- Of or relating to a cortex
CORTEX vs CORTICAL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Belonging to or consisting of bark or rind; resembling bark or rind; hence, external; belonging to the external covering: in anatomy, specifically applied to several enveloping or investing parts, in distinction from medullary: as, the cortical substance of the brain or kidney. See cortex.
CORTEX vs CORTICAL: RELATED WORDS
- Frontal lobe, Hippocampus, Temporal lobe, Cerebellum, Birchbark, Peel, M3, Bark, Rind, Crust, Brain, Cortical, Cerebral mantle, Pallium, Cerebral cortex
- Occipital, Synaptic, Somatosensory, Limbic, Thalamic, Cingulate, Parietal, Neural, Prefrontal, Cerebellar, Neuronal, Subcortical, Hippocampal, Electrode, Cortex
CORTEX vs CORTICAL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Amygdala, Prefrontal, Frontal lobe, Hippocampus, Temporal lobe, Cerebellum, Birchbark, Peel, Bark, Rind, Crust, Brain, Cortical, Pallium, Cerebral cortex
- Occipital, Synaptic, Somatosensory, Limbic, Thalamic, Cingulate, Parietal, Neural, Prefrontal, Cerebellar, Neuronal, Subcortical, Hippocampal, Electrode, Cortex
CORTEX vs CORTICAL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Parts of the brain involved in working memory functions include the frontal cortex, prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate, and basal ganglia.
- Back to front, unused axon die off coupled with myelination, plus connections between the frontal cerebral cortex the cerebellar cortex.
- Anterior cingulate cortex and anterior temporal cortex intracranial recordings.
- Information from the visual cortex is directed towards the temporal or parietal cortex via one of two streams.
- The premotor cortex is a region found beside the primary motor cortex.
- Please refer to the instructions at readthedocs about Grafana, Cortex, Loki Cortex.
- Anteriorcingulate cortex and anterior temporal cortex intracranial recordings.
- Cortex, Association: The Cortex immediately adjacent to and closely connected to The Primary Sensory Cortex.
- Depending on the content of that story these might include the primary visual cortex, the auditory cortex and the motor cortex among others.
- It also receives other direct inputs from the olfactory bulb, orbital frontal cortex, the IC cortex, cingulate cortex and superior temporal Gyrus.
- At the cortical level, this manifests itself in abnormalities in cortical activation patterns during movement tasks.
- Taken together, these observations would be consistent with cortical tissue damage and an ensuing repair attempt by endogenous cortical interneuron precursors.
- Moreover, increased cortical activation in these areas was equally associated with a higher cortical thickness within the prefrontal cortex.
- Cortical screws have a thread pitch and depth designed for hard, dense cortical bone.
- Statistical Analysis of Cortical Morphometrics Using Pooled Distances Based on Labeled Cortical Distance Maps.
- Callosal projections radiate from the cortical surface, interconnecting homologous left and right cortical areas.
- Locus coeruleus stimulation recruits a broad cortical neuronal network and increases cortical perfusion.
- Cortical plasticity and the development of behavior afler early frontal cortical injury.
- Cortical quilt: Similar patterns of cortical thickness link autism and other neuropscyh.
- The depth and extent to which a cortical lesion involves sub cortical tissue will alter the behavioral correlates of similar cortical lesions.
CORTEX vs CORTICAL: QUESTIONS
- Can extramedullary hematopoiesis occur in the adrenal cortex?
- What anterior pituitary hormone stimulates the adrenal cortex?
- What is EMS-cortex cloud service management software?
- Does the prefrontal cortex control decision making?
- Where is the secondary somatosensory cortex located?
- Is the cerebellar cortex homogeneous or compartmentalized?
- Does retrosplenial cortex inactivation worsen behavior?
- Is the frontal cortex of rodents related to the prefrontal cortex?
- How do I port software from the Cortex-M0 to the Cortex-M3?
- Will AMD announce new SoCs based on cortex-a78 and cortex-x1 cores?
- What is the pathophysiology of cortical development?
- Where do cortical GABAergic interneurons come from?
- What is post-traumatic transient cortical blindness?
- Does cortical spreading depression occur in humans?
- When is a cortical mastoidectomy considered complete?
- Is lacunar different from cortical ischaemic stroke?
- Does tranexamic acid cause renal cortical necrosis?
- What is Benson syndrome (posterior cortical atrophy)?
- What are osteoconductive/cortical/cancellous shafts?
- Is cortical thickness a property of the cortical mantle?