Qualquer destes sites é de extrema utilidade. Têm à vossa disposição desde
a versão mais antiga do Gray até atlas interactivos. Alguns destes atlas permitem-vos fazer “Quiz” ou simplesmente ao clicar na estrutura identificar a sua localização. http://www.bartleby.com/107/ http://www.profelis.org/webpages-cn/lectures/neuroanatomy_1ns.html http://ect.downstate.edu/courseware/haonline/toc.htm http://www.anatomyatlases.org/atlasofanatomy/index.shtml#TOC http://www.anatomy.usyd.edu.au/glossary/glossary.cgi?page=a http://www.thehumanbrain.info/histochemistry/hch/nph.php http://www.neuroanatomy.ca/index.html http://homepage.smc.edu/russell_richard/Psych2/Graphics/human_brai n_directions.htm
Outros sites que podem também consultar:
BrainMaps – Explore the Brain like never before. Internet‐enabled high‐resolution brain mapping and virtual microscopy, Center for Neuroscience University of California, Davis. http://brainmaps.org Neuroanatomy Lab Resource Appendices. Temple University School of Medicine's Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology. http://isc.temple.edu/neuroanatomy/lab Neuroanatomy Tutorial – Labelled Images. The Internet Pathology Laboratory for Medical Education – University of Utah. http://library.med.utah.edu/WebPath/HISTHTML/NEURANAT/N EURANCA.html Neuroscience Resource Page of the Department of Anatomy – University of Wisconsin Medical School. http://www.neuroanatomy.wisc.edu Interactive Atlases – Digital Anatomist Project. Department of Biological Structure – University of Washington, Seattle. http://www9.biostr.washington.edu/da.html Este último é na minha opinião excelente. Porque reúne uma mostra de cortes coronais, horizontais, transversos e reconstruções 3D (devem clicar no brain atlas click for atlas explorar cada um dos items)