. Diseases of the nervous system . hippo-campus major of the temporal lobe, and reaches that area of the frontal lobewhere the fasciculus uncinatus is inserted. Furthermore, we know there are important fiber masses which unite theareas on one side of the brain with those of the other side. They are calledcoordination fibers, and we assume that they serve the functions of bothhemispheres for the purpose of coordination. The corpus callosum (, 108) is the structure which unites the greatest number of these the exception of a few longitudinal bundles it consists almost entirel
. Diseases of the nervous system . hippo-campus major of the temporal lobe, and reaches that area of the frontal lobewhere the fasciculus uncinatus is inserted. Furthermore, we know there are important fiber masses which unite theareas on one side of the brain with those of the other side. They are calledcoordination fibers, and we assume that they serve the functions of bothhemispheres for the purpose of coordination. The corpus callosum (, 108) is the structure which unites the greatest number of these the exception of a few longitudinal bundles it consists almost entirelyof coordination fibers which emerge from one hemisphere and radiate intothe other, closely uniting in the median line, and forming a compactmass. Yentriculus tertius Massa intermedia Tela chorioidea ventriculi tertiiCorpus pineale Fissura transversa cerebriAquseductus cerebri \ (Sylvii) \ Lamina quadrigemina Velum medullareanterius Vent, quart. Foramen interventriculare (Monroi)Columna formes Septum pellucidum / Lamini rostralis. Commissura anteriorLamina terminalis v Chiasms opticumInfundibulum Tuber cinereum Hypophysis Corpus mamillareCorpus medull. cerebelli I » Medulla oblongata r°ns CVaroU) Fig. 107.—Median Sagittal Section through the Brain. (After Toldt.) Lobus frontalis Radiatio corporis callosi ^—-j Corpus caliosum
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectnervoussystem, bookye