Cortex
Cortex (Latin: "bark", "rind", "shell" or "husk") may refer to:
Sciences
- Cortex (botany), the outer portion of the stem or root of a plant
- Cortex (archaeology), the outer layer of rock formed on the exterior of raw materials by chemical and mechanical weathering processes
- Cell cortex, the region proximal to the cell surface, i.e. directly underneath the cell membrane
- Cortex (journal), a scientific journal founded in 1964 and produced by Masson Publishing
Anatomy
Organs
- the Renal cortex, the outer portion of the kidney
- the Adrenal cortex, the portion of the Adrenal gland responsible for the production of cortisol and aldosterone
The brain
- the Cerebral cortex (usually just cortex), the outer layer of the vertebrate cerebrum, part of which is the forebrain
- the Motor cortex, the regions of the cerebral cortex involved in voluntary motor functions
- the Prefrontal cortex, the anterior part of the frontal lobes of the brain
- the Visual cortex, regions of the cerebral cortex involved in visual functions
- the Cerebellar cortex, the outer layer of the vertebrate cerebellum
Video games
- In the Crash Bandicoot series of video games:
Other
- Cortex Inc., a touch sharing utility
- Cortex, a family of the ARM architecture of CPUs
- Cortex (browser extension)
See also
- Cordtex (explosive cord), a type of detonating cord generally used in mining. It uses an explosive core of pentaerythritol tetranitrate which is inside its plastic coating
- Cortex Command, a 2-dimensional side-scrolling action game developed by Data Realms
recovered names (17 non-redirects)
- Cortex Pharmaceuticals, a pharmaceutical company based in Irvine, California specializing in positive allosteric modulators of the AMPA receptor known as Ampakines
- Cortical Tectonics, the third studio album by American progressive metal band Canvas Solaris. It was released in 2007
- Cortical area, a part of the cerebral cortex
- Cortical blindness, the total or partial loss of vision in a normal-appearing eye caused by damage to the visual area in the brain's occipital cortex
- Cortical bone, one of the two types of osseous tissue that form bones
- Cortical bundle
- Cortical cooling, refers to the cooling methods restricted to the cerebral cortex, where most higher brain processes occur
- Cortical cords, structures that develop from sex cords in the female. After further development they become the ovarian follicles
- Cortical dysplasia, a congenital abnormality where the neurons in an area of the brain failed to migrate in the proper formation in utero
- Cortical inheritance, structural inheritance was discovered by Tracy Sonneborn, and other researchers, during his study on protozoa in the late 1930s
- Cortical lobule, a part of a renal lobe. It consists of the nephrons grouped around a single medullary ray, and draining into a single collecting duct
- Cortical magnification, describes how many neurons in an area of the visual cortex are 'responsible' for processing a stimulus of a given size, as a function of visual field location
- Cortical map, collections (areas) of minicolumns in the brain cortex that have been identified as performing a specific information processing function (texture maps, color maps, contour maps, etc.)
- Cortical minicolumn, a vertical column through the cortical layers of the brain, comprising perhaps 80–120 neurons, except in the primate primary visual cortex (V1), where there are typically more than twice the number
- Cortical pseudolaminar necrosis, the (uncontrolled) death of cells in (cerebral) cortex of the brain in a band-like pattern, with a relative perservation of cells immediately adjacent to the meninges
- Cortical reaction, occurs when a sperm cell unites with the egg's plasma membrane, altering the zona pellucida which prevents other sperm from binding to and entering the egg
- Cortical stimulation mapping, a type of electrocorticography which is used a method to determine the location in the brain where information of a certain kind is processed