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Definition of Neural structure
1. Noun. A structure that is part of the nervous system.
Specialized synonyms: Corpus Mamillare, Mamillary Body, Mammillary Body, Ganglion, Reflex Arc, Center, Centre, Nerve Center, Nerve Centre, Cerebral Hemisphere, Hemisphere, Piriform Area, Piriform Lobe, Pyriform Area, Pyriform Lobe, Olfactory Bulb, Brain, Encephalon, Neencephalon, Neoencephalon, Palaeencephalon, Paleencephalon, Paleoencephalon, Cerebellum, Cerebellar Hemisphere, Vermis, Vermis Cerebelli, Paleocerebellum, Cerebral Cortex, Cerebral Mantle, Cortex, Pallium, Geniculate Body, Cerebrum, Bulb, Medulla, Medulla Oblongata, Forebrain, Prosencephalon, Hippocampus, Cingulate Gyrus, Gyrus Cinguli, Telencephalon, Betweenbrain, Diencephalon, Interbrain, Thalmencephalon, Limbic Brain, Limbic System, Visceral Brain, Subthalamus, Thalamus, Hypothalamus, Mesencephalon, Midbrain, Locus Niger, Nucleus Niger, Substantia Nigra, Hindbrain, Rhombencephalon, Myelencephalon, Pons, Pons Varolii, Brain Stem, Brain-stem, Brainstem, Nucleus, Radiation, Medulla Spinalis, Spinal Cord, Ans, Autonomic Nervous System
Lexicographical Neighbors of Neural Structure
Literary usage of Neural structure
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Physical Basis of Mind and Morals by Michael Hendrick Fitch (1908)
"So that consciousness is not an objective thing existing in the body, but a
condition produced by objective things, through, and by, the neural structure, ..."
2. Philosophical Problems in the Light of Vital Organization by Edmund Montgomery (1907)
"The central neural structure is here vitally mobile, and forms a sensitive medium
whose constitution undergoes changes concomitant with and corresponding to ..."
3. Philosophical Problems in the Light of Vital Organization by Edmund Montgomery (1907)
"The central neural structure is here vitally mobile, and forms a sensitive medium
whose constitution undergoes changes concomitant with and corresponding to ..."
4. Psychology and the Psychosis: Intellect by Denton Jaques Snider (1896)
"Thus the movement in the organism and also its structure, especially its neural
structure, is cyclical. Already we observed the same fact as the chief ..."
5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature edited by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... substances and globulin in proportion to the degree of decay of the neural
structure; they arise from the destructive metabolism of the neural elements. ..."
6. Psychology: An Introductory Study of the Structure and Function of Human by James Rowland Angell (1904)
"This tendency is in no way modified by the complexity of the neural structure,
except as regards the ease with which we detect such reappearance of the ..."