superior limiting sulcus
Acronym: slms
The term superior limiting sulcus refers to one of three parts of the limiting sulcus in the human ( Ture-1999 ). Identified by dissection, it separates the insula from the frontoparietal operculum. The other parts are the inferior limiting sulcus and the anterior limiting sulcus. In the macaque it is one of just two parts; the other is the inferior limiting sulcus. The limiting sulcus is not present in rodents. Updated 31 May 2024.

Also known as: superior peri-insular sulcusNeuroNames ID : 2258


Species Having or Lacking this Structure

All Names & Sources

Internal Structure

Cells Found There

Genes Expressed There

Locus in Brain Hierarchy

Connections

Models Where It Appears

Publications About It




BrainInfo                           Copyright 1991-present                          University of Washington