Median Longitudinal fissue
The cleft between the cerebral hemispheres is known as the longitudinal fissure. It is a deep groove that separates the left and right hemispheres of the brain, allowing for the division of functions between them. This fissure houses the falx cerebri, a fold of the dura mater that helps stabilize the brain within the skull. The longitudinal fissure plays a crucial role in the organization of the brain's structure and its functional lateralization.
The cleft between the cerebral hemispheres of the brain is called the longitudinal fissure. This deep groove divides the brain into the left and right hemispheres, which are connected by a bundle of nerve fibers known as the corpus callosum. The longitudinal fissure plays a crucial role in separating the two hemispheres, allowing for specialization of functions while facilitating communication between them through the corpus callosum.
cerebral hemispheres
The longitudinal cerebral fissure.
The cerebral hemispheres are connected by the corpus callosum.
the cerebral cortenx
No.
There is one major fissure that divides the cerebral hemispheres, called the longitudinal fissure. It separates the left and right hemispheres of the brain.
Cerebral hemispheres (left and right)
The transverse fissure.
Forebrain
The embryonic origin of the cerebral hemispheres is from the neural ectoderm. The neural ectoderm is an area of tissue that forms in the center of the developing blastocyst.