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Caudate nucleus

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Two views of a model of the striatum: A, lateral aspect; B, medial aspect. |- style="text-align: center;" class="hiddenStructure" | colspan="2" |

|- style="text-align: center; line-height: 1;" class="hiddenStructure" | colspan="2" |Horizontal section, basal ganglia is blue |- class="hiddenStructure" |Latin |colspan="2"|nucleus caudatus |- class="hiddenStructure" |[[List of subjects in Gray's Anatomy:189#Gray.27s_page_.23|Gray's]] |colspan="2"|[subject #189 ] |- class="hiddenStructure" |Part of |colspan="2"| |- class="hiddenStructure" |Components |colspan="2"| |- class="hiddenStructure" |Artery |colspan="2"| |- class="hiddenStructure" |Vein |colspan="2"| |- class="hiddenStructure" |Acronym(s) |colspan="2"| |- class="hiddenStructure" |NeuroNames |colspan="2"|[hier-208] |- class="hiddenStructure" |MeSH |colspan="2"|[A08.186.211.730.885.105.487.550.184] |- class="hiddenStructure" |Dorlands/Elsevier |colspan="2"|[/] |}

The caudate nucleus is a telencephalic nucleus, one of the input nuclei of the basal ganglia involved with control of voluntary movement in the brain.

There is a caudate nucleus on each side of the brain, each a C-shape structure with a wider head at the front, tapering to a body and a tail. (Sometimes a part of the caudate nucleus is referred to as genu E. H. Yeterian, D. N. Pandya, "Corticostriatal connections of extrastriate visual areas in rhesus monkeys," The Journal of Comparative Neurology 352(3):436-457, 1995. PMID: [7706560])

The head and body of the caudate nucleus form the part of the floor of the anterior horn of the lateral ventricle. After the body travels briefly towards the back of the head, the tail curves back toward the anterior, forming the roof of the inferior horn of the lateral ventricle. This means that a coronal (on the same plane as the face) section that cuts through the tail will also cross the body (or head) of the caudate nucleus.

The caudate nucleus is related anatomically to a number of other structures. It is separated from the lenticular nucleus (a structure which includes the putamen) by the internal capsule. Together the caudate, putamen and globus pallidus form the striate body.

The left caudate in particular has been suggested to have a relationship with the thalamus that governs the comprehension and articulation of words as they are switched between languages. ["How bilingual brains switch between tongues" at newscientist.com] ["Language Control in the Bilingual Brain " at sciencemag.org]

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