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| | Tool Module: Three Major Social Theories |
 | | This theory was supported by the fact that the rhinencephalon had substantial connections with the hypothalamus and was still relatively large in human beings, even though the human sense of smell has largely atrophied compared with that of other species. |  | | Having found that stimulating the rhinencephalon produced visceral responses similar to those caused by emotions, MacLean identified it as the "centre" of the emotions. |  | | According to MacLean, the rhinencephalon, an older part of the cortex involved in the sense of smell, also played a central role in the emotions. |
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http://www.thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/capsules/histoire_bleu01.html
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| | Rhinencephalon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In animal anatomy, the rhinencephalon is a part of the brain involved with olfaction. |  | | Some references classify other areas of the brain related to perception of smell as rhinencephalon, but the areas of human brains that receive fibers strictly from the olfactory bulb are limited to those of the paleopallium. |  | | This page was last modified 20:58, 31 January 2006. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinencephalon
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| | Early American Manual Therapy |
 | | The anterior part of the gyrus hippocampi and the cygus cinguli and most of the uncinate gyrus seem to be concerned in the senses of taste and smell. |  | | Other parts of the rhinencephalon appear to be more efficient in initiating reflex actions than in arousing sensations in consciousness. |  | | As a result of this intimacy of associational relationships the stimulation of the olfactory cortex is very apt to initiate the activity of other cortical areas. |
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http://www.meridianinstitute.com/eamt/files/burns3/bur3ch09.html
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| | Rhinencephalon and Behavior -- Schreiner and Kling 184 (3): 486 -- AJP - Legacy |
 | | Rhinencephalon and Behavior -- Schreiner and Kling 184 (3): 486 -- AJP - Legacy |  | | Articles by Schreiner, L. Articles by Kling, A. Rhinencephalon and Behavior |  | | From the Department of Neurophysiology, Army Medical Service Graduate School, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D. Lesions of the rhinencephalon, primarily restricted to the |
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http://ajplegacy.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/184/3/486
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| | [No title] |
 | | It is little wonder that researchers believe that smell no longer lives in the rhinencephalon or the rest of the human brain. |  | | Texts on brain evolution (46) and even Freud (cited in 27) have argued that, since humans raised their noses from the ground in the ascent to bipedalism, olfaction has lost its importance in affecting human behavior. |  | | Thus, odors effect behavior yet the subject can't make the connection between the stimulus and the response. |
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http://psych.wlu.edu/cnl/papers/odorlang.html
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| | Nat' Academies Press, Discovering the Brain (1992) |
 | | The limbic system is responsible for most of the basic drives and emotions and the associated involuntary behavior that are important for an animal's survival: pain and pleasure, fear, anger, sexual feelings, and even docility and affection. |  | | In humans, of course, the stimuli that can affect the emotional brain are just about limitless in their variety. |  | | Also feeding into the limbic system are the thalamus and hypothalamus, as well as the amygdala, a small, almond-shaped complex of nerve cells that receive input from both the olfactory system and the cerebral cortex. |
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http://www.nap.edu/books/0309045290/html/21.html
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| | Piriform cortex - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The piriform cortex is part of the rhinencephalon situated in the telencephalon. |  | | subcortical/insular cortex: rhinencephalon, olfactory bulb, corpus callosum, lateral ventricles, septum pellucidum, ependyma, internal capsule, corona radiata, external capsule |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piriform_cortex
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| | [No title] |
 | | But all the parts of the rhinencephalon, which are so distinct in macrosmatic mammals, can also be recognized in the human brain. |  | | The anterior rhinal fissure, which is present in the early human foetus, vanishes (almost, if not altogether) in the adult. |
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http://www.aboutrealstuff.com/books/sitpos4/page-av.htm
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| | rhinencephalon - definition of rhinencephalon by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |
 | | rhinencephalon - a center in the cerebral hemispheres that governs the sense of smell in lower animals; in humans it seems to mediate complex emotional behavior |  | | The olfactory region of the brain, located in the cerebrum. |  | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/rhinencephalon
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| | Early American Manual Therapy |
 | | Neopalliium (new brain mantle)—That part of the cerebral cortex not included in the archipallium or rhinencephalon; the part concerned in cerebral functions exclusive of smell. |  | | It is part of the rhinencephalon and is rudimentary in the human brain. |  | | Archipallium—The primitive brain; the part of the hemispheres first developed; the rhinencephalon. |
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http://www.meridianinstitute.com/eamt/files/burns2/bur2glos.html
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| | Rhinencephalon - Psychology Wiki |
 | | Sylvius: 400+ structure neuroanatomical visual glossary; used by over half of U.S. medical schools |  | | Basal ganglia, Rhinencephalon, Amygdala, Hippocampus, Neocortex, Lateral ventricles |
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http://psychology.wikicities.com/wiki/Rhinencephalon
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| | MITECS: Cerebral Cortex |
 | | Paleocortex lies below the necks of the balloons and contains the rhinencephalon (nose brain), where smell information enters; it connects with other regions thought to be concerned with mood and EMOTION. |  | | Archicortex developed into the HIPPOCAMPUS, and is thought to be concerned with the laying down of memories. |  | | The second set of pathways in and out of the cortex pass through two adjacent regions of modified cortical sheet called the archicortex and paleocortex that flank the six-layered neocortex (Sarnat and Netsky 1981). |
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http://rm-f.net/users/pennywis/MITECS/Articles/barlow.html
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| | VERTEBRATA - LoveToKnow Article on VERTEBRATA |
 | | The details of the structure and development of the sense-organs, gill-slits and visceral organs of Craniates are sufficiently discussed in the articles dealing with the separate classes of the group. |  | | Thickenings of the floor of the thalamencephalon give riseto the optic thalami; the paired optic lobes grow out from its sides; the pineal body, which primitively was a pair of dorsal eyes, grows from the roof and the infundibulum from the floor. |  | | The telencephalon in front grows out secondarily to an extent progressively increasing in the higher groups and forms the corpora striata, the cerebral lobes and the rhinencephalon. |
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http://www.1911ency.org/V/VE/VERTEBRATA.htm
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| | but fear itself |
 | | The olfactory bulb, which handles smells, is the sensory processing center that is most closely linked to our limbic system, where our emotional responses are processed. |  | | Physician/curator Koan-Jeff Baysa engages the primordial sense of fear, one of the basic survival functions provided by the rhinencephalon, the reptilian brain, the smelling brain. |  | | Kant and Hegel assigned the olfactory sense to a base function in contrast to vision which was held as the privileged sense. |
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http://art3idea.ce.psu.edu/einsof/baysa/but_fear_itself.html
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| | Re: why some odors could trigger strong emotional responses in people? |
 | | That is likely why smells can be recognized as familiar with strong emotional attachments even when we can't recall the names or situations in which we smelled those things before. |  | | There are strong connections between the parts of the brain that process smell (rhinencephalon) and emotion (limbic system), with weaker connections between rhinencephalon and more cognitive parts of the brain (cortex). |  | | Here is an answer to your question, courtesy of my colleague Dr. Roger Remington. |
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http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/nov98/910389185.Ns.r.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Which cranial nerve(s) are associated with the Rhinencephalon? |  | | Which cranial nerve(s) are associated with the Hippocampus and the Amygdala? |
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http://bio.winona.edu/reuter/117us/group/011/w13ga.htm
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| | Chapter 13 |
 | | This is the olfactory portion of the rhinencephalon. |  | | This is the non-lofactory portion of the rhinencephalon. |
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http://compepid.tuskegee.edu/syllabi/biomedical/Anatomy/neuroanat/chapter13.html
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| | Lab2 |
 | | This is the amygdala, a nucleus that has been associated with certain emotions, such as aggression and fear. |  | | One important structure located in the rhinencephalon is the hippocampal gyrus, a structure that is exremely important for development and maintenance of memories. |  | | This mass of tissue, the rhinencephalon or 'smell brain,' is easily visible in the sheep brain, but it is hidden from external view by the temporal lobe in human brain. |
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http://www.csun.edu/~vcpsy00i/dissfa01/Lab2fa01.html
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| | SYMPOSIUM 2003 |
 | | Summary: The term rhinencephalon was originally used to refer to the anatomical interrelatedness of the olfactory and limbic systems. |  | | I propose this as a window into itinerancy in the olfactory system, and I will suggest possible sites and mechanisms that may act as a history parameter in tracking the evolution of system dynamics in longitudinal studies. |  | | The connections among these systems are well preserved among mammals. |
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http://cnd.memphis.edu/sym2003/Kay_abstract.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | The rhinencephalon is a small part of the human limbic system and is primarily involved in olfaction. |  | | Other structures in the rhinencephalon are the olfactory nerve rootlets, olfactory striae, olfactory bulb. |  | | The limbic system refers to the limbic lobe and other structhe brain stem. |
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http://kumc.edu/research/medicine/pharmacology/CAI/webCAI/anatomy/ua24.wbc
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| | The olfactory bulb, the limbic system and the influence of smell on the physiology of man. |
 | | Before the term "limbic system" was used, the system was referred to as the rhinencephalon or "smell brain" and is considered as one of the oldest systems in the human body. |  | | The limbic system represents the hippocampus, fornic, cingulate gyrus, thalamus, mamillary bodies, amygdala and olfactory bulb, and although this might sound far too technical to be interesting, it is fascinating how the sense of smell actually happens and the effect it has on us all. |  | | When a smell enters the nasal cavity, it meets up with over 50,000,000 receptor neurons which are located in the upper part of the nose and nasal septum, and the receptors are specialized in such a way that certain react to certain smells. |
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http://www.essentialoils.co.za/olfactory.htm
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| | Synonyms of rhinencephalon |
 | | rhinencephalon, olfactory brain, center, centre, nerve center, nerve centre |
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http://www.infoplease.com/thesaurus/rhinencephalon
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| | Physiology III Neuroscience - Limbic System |
 | | The observation that odors often evoke emotional reactions and memories reflects the origin of much of this system in the "smell brain" (rhinencephalon). |  | | Two parts seem especially important in emotions-the amygdala and the anterior part of the cingulate gyrus. |  | | Extensive connections between the limbic system and lower and higher brain regions allow the system to integrate and respond to a wide variety of environmental stimuli. |
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http://www.hodsonhome.com/mna2001/physiology/physiology3/exam3/phys3.limbicsystem.htm
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| | Gray's Anatomy of the Human Body - The Fore-brain or Prosencephalon - Yahoo! Education |
 | | The rhinencephalon, associated with the sense of smell, is the oldest part of the telencephalon, and forms almost the whole of the hemisphere in some of the lower animals, e. |  | | Although superficially continuous with the hippocampal gyrus, the uncus forms morphologically a part of the rhinencephalon. |  | | They were thus regarded as a part of the rhinencephalon, but it is now recognized that they belong to the neopallium; the cingulate gyrus is therefore sometimes described as a part of the frontal lobe, and the hippocampal as a part of the temporal lobe. |
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http://messenger.yahooligans.com/reference/gray/subjects/subject?id=189
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| | Suppressive effect of green tea catechins on morphologic and functional regression of the brain in aged mice with ... |
 | | A suppressive effect of GT-catechin intake on cognitive dysfunction, as determined by the learning time needed to acquire an avoidance response and assessments of working memory in a Y-maze, was also found in 12-month-old mice. |  | | We investigated the effect of long-term GT-catechin intake on aging and oxidative damage using aged mice with accelerated senescence (SAMP10), a model of brain senescence with cerebral atrophy and cognitive dysfunction. |  | | A preventive effect of GT-catechin intake on oxidative DNA damage was also observed in the rhinencephalon (an area particularly susceptible to atrophy) at 6 months of age, i.e. |
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http://www.arclab.org/medlineupdates/abstract_15236762.html
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| | B:\RMS6 |
 | | The structure enclosed medially by the lateral ventricles is the septal region. |  | | The septal region, along with the hippocampus are two structures of the rhinencephalon. |  | | The section is located in the forebrain, which consists of the telencephalon and diencephalon. |
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http://academic.uofs.edu/department/neuro/rms7.html
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| | Sztamska |
 | | The aim of this study was anatomical and comparative examination of arterial vascularization of the rhinencephalon in man and in macrosmatic mammals. |  | | In the cat and sheep brains, the region corresponding to the human anterior perforated substance comprises the greater rhinencephalon surface. |  | | It was found, that the structure, topography and vascular areas of arteries supplying the rhinencephalon in man and animals are different. |
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http://ampat.amu.edu.pl/czasopis/fn35-1/sztams.htm
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| | Punctuation in English |
 | | Because it is inexact, the term rhinencephalon has generally been dropped. |  | | Example: The term rhinencephalon has generally been dropped because it is inexact. |  | | In English the comma is often used if the subordinated clause is in initial position, but less often if the main clause comes first. |
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http://users.utu.fi/dbergen/punctuation.html
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| | rhinencephalon - OneLook Dictionary Search |
 | | rhinencephalon : The On-line Medical Dictionary [home, info] |  | | rhinencephalon : Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary [home, info] |  | | We found 15 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word rhinencephalon: |
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http://www.onelook.com/?w=rhinencephalon
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| | Gray, Henry. 1918. Anatomy of the Human Body. Page 744 |
 | | This great expansion of the hemispheres is a characteristic feature of the brains of mammals, and attains its maximum development in the brain of man. Elliott-Smith divides each cerebral hemisphere into three fundamental parts, viz., the rhinencephalon, the corpus striatum, and the neopallium. |  | | Inferior surface of brain of embryo at beginning of fourth month. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/107/pages/page744.html
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| | B:\RMS6.B |
 | | Telencephalon: Consists of the cerebral cortex, corpora striata and rhinencephalon. |
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http://academic.uofs.edu/department/neuro/RMS6.HTML
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| | Find in a Library: The rhinencephalon and related structures |
 | | Find in a Library: The rhinencephalon and related structures |  | | To find this item in a library, enter a postal code, state, province, or country in the field above. |  | | WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries. |
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http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/7165a7eed19af235.html
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