rostral intralaminar nuclei (RIL)

Also known as: rostral intralaminar nuclei, Nuclei intralaminares rostrales, anterior group of intralaminar nuclei

NeuroNames ID: 318

All Names & Sources

Showing 6 synonym(s)

Name:

rostral intralaminar nuclei

Language:

English

Organism:

human

Citation:

Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins Co., 1983

Source Title:

Human Neuroanatomy

Name:

rostral intralaminar nuclei

Language:

English

Organism:

Macaca fascicularis

Source:

Martin-1997

Citation:

Primate Information Center, University of Washington, Seattle, 1997.

Source Title:

Template Atlas of the Primate Brain

Name:

Nuclei intralaminares rostrales

Language:

Latin

Organism:

Unspecified

Source:

NeuroNames

Citation:

University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Source Title:

NeuroNames

Name:

RIL

Language:

acronym

Organism:

Unspecified

Source:

NeuroNames

Citation:

University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Source Title:

NeuroNames

Name:

nuclei intralaminari rostrali

Language:

Italian

Organism:

human

Citation:

EdiSes, s.r.l.- Napoli, 1995

Source Title:

Fondamenti di Neuroanatomia

Name:

anterior group of intralaminar nuclei

Language:

English

Organism:

human

Source:

AIBS-2011

Citation:

Allen Brain Atlas: Data Portal https://atlas.brain-map.org/

Source Title:

Allen Institute for Brain Science

Species With The Structure
Equivalent By Human Macaque Rat Mouse
Topology Has The Structure Has The Structure Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located

Showing 2 record(s)

Basis:

Topology

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

rostral intralaminar nuclei

Basis:

Topology

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

rostral intralaminar nuclei

Source:

Martin-1997

Models Where It Appears
Structural CNS Model - Macaque

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.