Prosencéphale


This article is a draft on neuroscience and anatomy.

You can share your knowledge by improving it (how?) according to the recommendations of the corresponding projects. Embryonic brain. Left: stage with three vesicles; right: later stage with five vesicles.

In vertebrate anatomy, the forebrain is part of the brain, or brain. The forebrain, mesencephalon and rhombencephalon are three vesicles that develop during the neurogenesis of the vertebrate brain.

Also called forebrain, the forebrain is subdivided into diencephalon and telencephalon. The forebrain comes from the top of the neural tube and is the most rostral of the three vesicles.

The advanced development of prosencephalic regions in adult humans, particularly neopallium, creates the physiological basis for many of the unique human skills related to memory, planning, deduction and manufacturing.

The three cephalic vesicles are visible at the end of the 4th week of embryonic development.

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