What is Sylvian's Fissure?
Sylvian's crack is a deep, lateral enforcement that divides the lobes of the human brain. It basically divides the upper part of the brain from the bottom. It is the deepest and most easily recognizable from many cracks in the human brain. In addition to serving as the main indicative point of the brain landscape, it is not known that no purpose or specific function could attribute Sylvian's crack. In the back of the brain, the lobe divides the parietal lobe, which processes the sensory entry received from the body. The frontal and parietal lobes fall above the crack while the temporary lobe falls under it.
This crack was referred to in early anatomical documents as Anfratuctuosa fissura . Sylvian Fissure is thus named because it is assumed that Franciscus Sylvius, a professor of medicine at Leiden University, was expected. Modern science also calls this brain, has side sulcus, side crack or Sylvius crack.
Sylvian's jerkIt starts at the roots of the eyes, passes through the temples and ends near the roots of the brain stem. They do not complete the brain completely. It occurs unilaterally, which means it occurs in both hemispheres of the brain. It does not divide the brain into two roughly the same parts - as well as the medial longitudinal crack that divides the brain into the left and right hemisphere. Part of the brain over Sylvian's crack is clearly greater than the amount below it.
Injuries that occur near this function ofinformation have already learned. Such damage can also disrupt the brain's ability to process stimuli from the body, resulting in disturbing any of the five senses. These injuries may also characterize emotional instability or lack of emotional control.
This particular crack is one of the first brain cracks that develops on fruits. It seems that in about the 14th week of the gestational period, at about the same time as the eyelids, nails and reproductive organs develop. Most other brain cracks do not develop up to the 20th week and someher up to 33 weeks.