inferior occipital gyrus (IOG)
Also known as: inferior occipital gyrus, Gyrus occipitalis inferior, Gyrus occipitalis tertius
NeuroNames ID: 156
Showing 5 synonym(s)
Name:
inferior occipital gyrus
Language:
English
Organism:
Macaca mulatta
Source:
Krieg-1975
Citation:
Brain Books, Evanston, Illinois, 1975
Source Title:
Interpretive Atlas Of The Monkey's Brain
Name:
Gyrus occipitalis inferior
Language:
Latin
Organism:
human
Source:
Talairach-1988
Citation:
M. Rayport (Translator), Thieme Medical Publishers, New York, 1988
Source Title:
Co-Planar Stereotaxic Atlas of the Human Brain
Name:
IOG
Language:
acronym
Organism:
macaque
Source:
Martin-2000
Citation:
Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2000
Source Title:
Primate Brain Maps: Structure Of The Macaque Brain
Name:
Gyrus occipitalis tertius
Language:
Latin
Organism:
human
Source:
Mai-1997
Citation:
San Diego: Academic Press, 1997
Source Title:
Atlas of the Human Brain
Name:
gyrus occipital inférieur
Language:
French
Organism:
human
Source:
Duvernoy-1992
Citation:
Springer-Verlag, Paris, 1992
Source Title:
Le cerveau humain: Surface, coupes seriees tridimensionnelles et IRM
| Equivalent By | Human | Macaque | Rat | Mouse |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Topology | Has The Structure | Has The Structure | Does Not Have The Structure | Does Not Have The Structure |
Showing 5 record(s)
Basis:
Topology
Has Equivalent:
Yes
Organism:
Homo sapiens (human)
Their Name:
Gyrus occipitalis inferior
Source:
Talairach-1988
Basis:
Topology
Has Equivalent:
Yes
Organism:
Homo sapiens (human)
Their Name:
Gyrus occipitalis tertius
Source:
Mai-1997
Basis:
Topology
Has Equivalent:
Yes
Organism:
Macaca mulatta (Macaca mulatta)
Their Name:
inferior occipital gyrus
Source:
Krieg-1975
Brain structures of the macaque are illustrated in BrainInfo’s NeuroMaps macaque brain atlas. Structures are grouped by proximity in a hierarchy corresponding to the central nervous system hierarchy of NeuroNames ( Bowden-1995 Martin-2000 ). Structures in the NeuroMaps atlas are based on the segmentation of an MRI of the brain of a 3-year old male rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta). The atlas is most useful for targeting structures for implantating electrodes and chemtrodes. Updated 29 Oct 2025.



