In animal anatomy, the rhinencephalon (from the Greek, ῥίς, rhis = "nose", and ἐγκέφαλος, enkephalos = "brain"), also called the smell-brain or olfactory brain, is a part of the brain involved with smell (i.e. olfaction). It forms the paleocortex and is rudimentary in the human brain.[citation needed]
Components
The term rhinencephalon has been used to describe different structures at different points in time.[1]
The development of the rhinencephalon varies among species. In humans it is rudimentary. A small area where the frontal lobe meets the temporal lobe and the area of cortex on the uncus of the parahippocampal gyrus (both belonging to the olfactory cortex) have a different structure (so called "allocortex") than most of the telencephalon and are phylogenetically older (so called paleocortex).[3]
References
^Anthoney, Terence R. (1994). Neuroanatomy and the neurologic exam: a thesaurus of synonyms, similar-sounding non-synonyms, and terms of variable meaning. Boca Raton: CRC Press. p. 311. ISBN0-8493-8631-4.
^Širca, Anton; Meznarič-Petruša, Mija (1997). Anatomija : skripta za študente medicine. Del 2, Živčevje [Anatomy: the script for students of medicine. Part 2, Nervous system] (in Slovenian). Ljubljana: Medicinska fakulteta. p. 29. ISBN978-961-90305-5-4.