Grey matter: Difference between revisions
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{{Image|Pnas.090504197.jpg|right|500px|[[Power law]] relationship between [[cerebral cortex|cortical]] [[white matter]] and grey matter across 56 species of [[mammal]]s.}} | {{Image|Pnas.090504197.jpg|right|500px|[[Power law]] relationship between [[cerebral cortex|cortical]] [[white matter]] and grey matter across 56 species of [[mammal]]s.}} | ||
'''Grey matter''' is the name given to the tightly packed neuronal cell bodies which can be found in the central nervous system and especially the brain and neocortex. The axons within the grey matter are usually not myelinated. | '''Grey matter''' is the name given to the tightly packed neuronal cell bodies which can be found in the central nervous system and especially the brain and neocortex. The axons within the grey matter are usually not myelinated.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:00, 24 August 2024
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Zhang & Sejnowski (2000)
Power law relationship between cortical white matter and grey matter across 56 species of mammals.
Power law relationship between cortical white matter and grey matter across 56 species of mammals.
Grey matter is the name given to the tightly packed neuronal cell bodies which can be found in the central nervous system and especially the brain and neocortex. The axons within the grey matter are usually not myelinated.