area 14 of Brodmann ( 14 )

The term area 14 of Brodmann refers to a subdivision of the cerebral cortex of the guenon defined on the basis of cytoarchitecture. It differs most clearly from area 13 of Brodmann in that it lacks a distinct internal granular layer (IV). Other differences are a less distinct external granular layer (II), a widening of the relatively cell-free zone of the external pyramidal layer (III); cells in the internal pyramidal layer (V) are denser and rounded; and the cells of the multiform layer (VI) assume a more distinct tangential orientation ( Brodmann-1905 ). Brodmann's area 14 is unrelated to area 14 of Walker and area 14 (macaque), which are located in the orbital gyri. It is more equivalent to the dysgranular insula or the dysgranular insular cortex (Roberts) of later architectonic segmentations.

Also known as

Name Language Source Source Citation Source Title Organism
Typus 14 German Brodmann-1905 Journal fuer Psychologie und Neurologie, 4:5/6:177-226, 1905. Beitraege zur histologischen Lokalisation der Grosshirnrinde: dritte Mitteilung: Die Rindenfelder der niederen Affen guenon
Ia acronym Brodmann-1905 Journal fuer Psychologie und Neurologie, 4:5/6:177-226, 1905. Beitraege zur histologischen Lokalisation der Grosshirnrinde: dritte Mitteilung: Die Rindenfelder der niederen Affen guenon
area 14 of Brodmann (guenon) English NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames guenon
14 acronym Brodmann-1905 Journal fuer Psychologie und Neurologie, 4:5/6:177-226, 1905. Beitraege zur histologischen Lokalisation der Grosshirnrinde: dritte Mitteilung: Die Rindenfelder der niederen Affen guenon
Insula anterior Latin Brodmann-1905 Journal fuer Psychologie und Neurologie, 4:5/6:177-226, 1905. Beitraege zur histologischen Lokalisation der Grosshirnrinde: dritte Mitteilung: Die Rindenfelder der niederen Affen guenon
Brodmann's area 14 English NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames guenon
area 14 of Brodmann English NeuroNames-2000 NeuroNames is used as a term's source if no published source of the term has been found. In most cases, the term is an English translation of a commonly used Latin term. In some cases it is a Latin translation of an English term for which no published Latin equivalent has been found. Latin roots of words not found in the neuroanatomical literature are derived from Cassell's Latin Dictionary (Simpson-59). guenon
BA14 acronym NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames Unspecified
An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙