nerve tract
Noun A bundle of nerve fibers (axons) that are grouped together and follow a specific pathway through the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord). These tracts serve as information highways, transmitting signals between different regions of the nervous system.
The term "nerve tract" is used specifically in neuroanatomy to describe organized collections of axons within the central nervous system. It is a more general term than specific tract names.
Examples: * Damage to the nerve tract connecting the visual cortex to other brain areas can cause specific visual processing problems. * The corticospinal tract is a major motor nerve tract that carries signals from the brain to the spinal cord. * Researchers are mapping the nerve tracts involved in memory formation.
- White Matter Tracts: Nerve tracts are a primary component of the brain's white matter, which appears white due to the myelin sheath insulating the axons.
- Ascending vs. Descending Tracts: Tracts are often classified by the direction of signal transmission. Ascending tracts carry sensory information the brain, while descending tracts carry motor commands the brain.
- Tract: Often used interchangeably with "nerve tract" in neurological contexts (e.g., the optic tract).
- Pathway: A broader term that can refer to a nerve tract or a series of connected neurons performing a specific function.
- Fasciculus: A synonym for a small bundle or tract of nerve fibers.
- Lemniscus: Refers to a specific type of ribbon-like nerve tract in the brainstem (e.g., medial lemniscus).
- Nerve Pathway: A more general term for the route traveled by nerve impulses.
- Neural pathway
- Fiber tract
- Axon pathway
- Nucleus: Refers to a cluster of neuron (gray matter) in the central nervous system, as opposed to a bundle of their (white matter/tract).
- Central vs. Peripheral: "Nerve tract" refers specifically to bundles the central nervous system (CNS). A bundle of axons the CNS, such as in the arm or leg, is called a nerve (e.g., the sciatic nerve).
- Tract vs. Nerve: This is a key distinction. Both are bundles of axons, but their location defines the term: tract (inside CNS), nerve (outside CNS).
- a bundle of myelinated nerve fibers following a path through the brain