inferior frontal sulcus ( ifrs )

The term inferior frontal sulcus refers to a groove that parallels the lateral fissure on the lower lateral surface of the frontal lobe. Separating the middle frontal gyrus from the inferior frontal gyrus, it exists only in the human. It is not found in the macaque, and an equivalent structure is not found in the smooth cerebral cortex of the rat or mouse ( NeuroNames ).

Also known as

Name Language Source Source Citation Source Title Organism
cisura frontal inferior Spanish Carpenter-1994 edicion 4, Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore; traducción de Editorial Medica Panamericana, Buenos Aires, efectuada por el Dr. Alejandro Kaufman Neuroanatomía Fundamentos human
нижняя лобная борозда Russian Savel'ev-1996 AREA XVII, Moscow, 1996. Stereoskopicheskii Atlas Mozga Cheloveka human
inferior frontal sulcus (human) English Carpenter-1983 Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins Co., 1983 Human Neuroanatomy human
Sulcus frontalis inferior Latin Nomina-1983 Fifth Edition, Williams and Wilkins Co., Baltimore, 1983 Nomina Anatomica human
Sulcus frontalis secundus Latin Cunningham-1892 The Academy House, Dublin, 1892 Contribution to the Surface Anatomy of the Cerebral Hemispheres with a Chapter upon Cranio-Cerebral Topography human
sulcus f2 English Cunningham-1892 The Academy House, Dublin, 1892 Contribution to the Surface Anatomy of the Cerebral Hemispheres with a Chapter upon Cranio-Cerebral Topography human
inferior frontal fissure English Crosby-1962 New York: MacMillan, 1962 Correlative Anatomy of the Nervous System human
ifrs acronym NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames human
sulkus frontal inferior Indonesian Noback-1982 Jakarta: Penerbit Buku Kedokteran EGC, 1982 Anatomi Susunan Saraf Manusia, Prinsip-Prinsip Dasar Neurobiologi human
sillon frontal inférieur French Duvernoy-1992 Springer-Verlag, Paris, 1992 Le cerveau humain: Surface, coupes seriees tridimensionnelles et IRM human
inferior frontal sulcus English Ono-1990 Atlas of the Cerebral Sulci, Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc., New York, 1990. Atlas of the Cerebral Sulci human
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