Guangdong Province 2012 biology college entrance examination question 27 the second blank answer is the hypothalamus, but later said that it releases antidiuretic hormone (should be)

The hypothalamus is located below the inferior hook of the thalamus, constituting the lower wall of the third ventricle, the boundaries of which are not very clear, and extends downward to connect with the pituitary stalk. Although the hypothalamus is small in size, it receives many nerve impulses and is therefore the center of the endocrine and nervous systems. They can regulate the function of the anterior pituitary gland, synthesize neuropituitary hormones and control autonomic and vegetative functions. Neurosecretions from the hypothalamus flow into the anterior pituitary through the portal vein, some of which stimulate the release of the anterior pituitary, called releasing hormone (RH), and some of which inhibit the release of hormones from the anterior pituitary, called inhibitory hormone (IH). The prohormone-releasing or inhibitory hormones that are inhibited are thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), corticotropin-releasing hormone (cRH), follicle stimulating hormone-releasing hormone (FSH-RH), luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH), growth hormone-releasing hormone (GRH), growth hormone-inhibitory hormone (GIH or S.S.), lactation hormone-releasing hormone ( PRH), melanocyte-stimulating hormone-inhibiting hormone (MRIH) and melanocyte-stimulating hormone-releasing hormone (MRH), among ten others. The release-inhibiting hormones secreted by the hypothalamus, the prohormones secreted by the pituitary gland, and the hormones synthesized by the target glands form a network of hormones that regulate many of the collective activities.