Brain regions

somatomotor areasMOSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
lateral septal nucleus, rostral part, medial zone, dorsal regionLSr.m.dSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
nucleus ambiguus, dorsal divisionAMBdSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
substantia nigraSNSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
preoptic periventricular nucleusPVpoSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
dorsal terminal nucleus accessory optic tractDTSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
pedunculopontine nucleusPPNSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
fasciola cinereaFCSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
cerebellumCBSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
external medullary lamina thalamusemSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
superior colliculus, superficial gray layerSCsgSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
lateral aperture, fourth ventricleLAPSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
subiculum, ventral part, stratum radiatumSUBv-srSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
fourth ventricle properV4Swanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
intermediodorsal nucleus thalamusIMDSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
infracerebellar nucleusICBSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
brachium of the superior collliculusbscSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
entorhinal areaENTSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
lateral septal nucleus, caudal (caudodorsal) partLScSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
third ventricle, thalamic partV3tSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
medial accessory oculomotor nucleusMANSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
parasubthalamic nucleusPSTNSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, periventricular partPVHpvSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
lateral terminal nucleus accessory optic tractLTSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus, ventrolateral partVMHvlSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
olivary pretectal nucleusOPSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
tenia tecta, ventral part, layers 1-3TTv1-3Swanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
nucleus ambiguus, ventral divisionAMBvSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
vestibular nucleiVNCSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
intraparafloccular fissureipfSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
subiculum, dorsal part, stratum radiatumSUBd-srSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
rostral medullary velumRMVESwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
subcommissural organSCOSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
posteromedial visual areaVISpmSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
tuberomammillary nucleus, ventral partTMvSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
lateral reticular nucleus, parvicellular partLRNpSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
paramedian lobulePRMSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
nucleus incertus, compact partNIcSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
dorsal column nucleiDCNSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
red nucleusRNSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
bed nuclei stria terminalis, anterior division, fusiform nucleusBSTfuSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
rhomboid nucleusRHSwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas
anterior hypothalamic areaAHASwanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas

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Brain regions

Brain regions are a type taxonomy defined by brain atlases. In BrainSTEM, brain regions are a shared model across users. New brain atlasses and therefore brain regions are added by the admin team. Please reach to us if you are missing a brain atlas that is publicly available, that you would like to have incorporated.

Brain Atlases

The following brain atlases are available in BrainSTEM:

  • Allen Mouse Brain Atlas: The Allen Mouse Brain Atlas is a genome-wide, three-dimensional map of gene expression throughout the adult mouse brain. The atlas comprises cellular resolution in situ hybridization images with comprehensive anatomic coverage that reveal where each gene is expressed in the mouse brain, as well as an integrated suite of powerful data search, visualization tools, and an annotated reference atlas. The atlas is based on wild type C57BL/6J mice.
  • Allen Developing Mouse Brain Atlas: The Allen Developing Mouse Brain Atlas is a detailed map of gene expression changes during the development of the brain. The atlas provides a framework to explore both when and where genes are activated in the mouse brain from embryo through adulthood. Informatics data processing enables both spatial search and temporal search. Developmental reference atlases provide additional context to interpret the data. Anatomic and temporal search locates enhanced gene expression in primary brain areas, and manual data annotation allows users to view curated summaries of gene expression in small structures.
  • Allen Human Brain Atlas: The Allen Human Brain Atlas is a unique multi-modal atlas that maps gene expression across the healthy human brain. Key features include an “all genes, all structures” RNA microarray survey that is spatially mapped to an MRI reference space, in situ hybridization image data at cellular resolution for selected genes in targeted brain regions, and an annotated human brain atlas guide. Additional data on selected neurological conditions are available in the Aging, Dementia, TBI Study and Ivy Glioblastoma Database.
  • Allen Developing Human Brain Atlas: The BrainSpan Atlas of the Developing Human Brain provides a broad and detailed anatomical analysis of gene expression across multiple stages of early human brain development. It includes in situ hybridization, RNA-sequencing, and microarray data, along with supporting neuroanatomical reference materials.
  • Allen Non-Human Primate Brain Atlas: The NIH Blueprint Non-Human Primate Atlas provides a developmental neuroanatomical framework for exploring the cellular and molecular architecture of the developing postnatal brain of the rhesus macaque.
  • Allen Spinal Column Atlas: The Allen Spinal Cord Atlas is a comprehensive, genome-wide map of gene expression throughout the healthy mouse spinal cord at ages p56 and p4. This resource details gene diversity in the normal spinal cord and provides an essential baseline for understanding how the spinal cord may be altered in disease or injury. The atlas includes image-based in situ hybridization data at cellular resolution for both juvenile (P4) and adult (P56) stages, with anatomic coverage across the full length of the spinal cord, and accompanying histological reference images.
  • Brain Maps 4.0 - Rat brain Atlas: An open access atlas with global nervous system nomenclature ontology and flatmaps. The fourth edition of Brain maps: structure of the rat brain is presented here as an open access internet resource for the neuroscience community. One new feature is a set of 10 hierarchical nomenclature tables that define and describe all parts of the rat nervous system within the framework of a strictly topographic system devised previously for the human nervous system.
  • Paxinos & Franklin 2001 Mouse Brain Atlas (Second edition): Brain Atlas by Paxinos & Franklin based on adult C57BL/J6 Mouse (weight range 26-30 g).
  • Paxinos & Watson 1997 Rat Brain Atlas (Third edition): Paxinos & Watson rat brain atlas based on adult male Wistar rats (weight range 270-310 g).
  • Swanson 2004 Rat Brain Atlas (Third edition): Rat brain atlas based on adult Sprague-Dawley rats.

Fields

  • Name: The name of the brain region (required).
  • Acronym: Acronym used for the brain region (required).
  • Description: A general description of the brain region.
  • Atlas: The brain atlas in which the brain region is defined. Options described above (required).

Permissions

Once a new brain atlas has been implemented it becomes available to everyone.

API Access

The API allows for programmable access, enabling you to read entries through the API. For details about the fields and data structure, refer to the Brain region API endpoint documentation.