Cerebral sulcus

The cerebral sulcus - (s.cerebri) is a structural element that separates the two hemispheres of the brain in its central part, at the point where the pituitary nuclei and pineal gland are located. Thanks to the grooves, the division of neural connections on both sides of the central posterior constriction and the separation of other structural parts of the brain both in front and behind occur. It is according to this graphoepiphyseal analogue that “brain tissue” is divided into:

precentral gyrus; paracentral grooves and valley; posterior parietal obtuse and frontal obtuse gyri; hippocampal gyrus; insula; olfactory triangle; temporomandibular arcuate groove.

It is the groove of the head that allows you to go deeper and use the mental power of both lobes at the same time or focus on one function.



The sulcus cerebri is a groove that runs through the white matter of the cerebral hemispheres. The sulcus of the brain consists of a large number of nerves that are responsible for various functions of the body, such as: smell, taste, hearing, vision, speech, body movement