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      Cortical Folding Patterns and Predicting Cytoarchitecture

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          Abstract

          The human cerebral cortex is made up of a mosaic of structural areas, frequently referred to as Brodmann areas (BAs). Despite the widespread use of cortical folding patterns to perform ad hoc estimations of the locations of the BAs, little is understood regarding 1) how variable the position of a given BA is with respect to the folds, 2) whether the location of some BAs is more variable than others, and 3) whether the variability is related to the level of a BA in a putative cortical hierarchy. We use whole-brain histology of 10 postmortem human brains and surface-based analysis to test how well the folds predict the locations of the BAs. We show that higher order cortical areas exhibit more variability than primary and secondary areas and that the folds are much better predictors of the BAs than had been previously thought. These results further highlight the significance of cortical folding patterns and suggest a common mechanism for the development of the folds and the cytoarchitectonic fields.

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          Most cited references56

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          Specification of cerebral cortical areas.

          P Rakic (1988)
          How the immense population of neurons that constitute the human cerebral neocortex is generated from progenitors lining the cerebral ventricle and then distributed to appropriate layers of distinctive cytoarchitectonic areas can be explained by the radial unit hypothesis. According to this hypothesis, the ependymal layer of the embryonic cerebral ventricle consists of proliferative units that provide a proto-map of prospective cytoarchitectonic areas. The output of the proliferative units is translated via glial guides to the expanding cortex in the form of ontogenetic columns, whose final number for each area can be modified through interaction with afferent input. Data obtained through various advanced neurobiological techniques, including electron microscopy, immunocytochemistry, [3H]thymidine and receptor autoradiography, retrovirus gene transfer, neural transplants, and surgical or genetic manipulation of cortical development, furnish new details about the kinetics of cell proliferation, their lineage relationships, and phenotypic expression that favor this hypothesis. The radial unit model provides a framework for understanding cerebral evolution, epigenetic regulation of the parcellation of cytoarchitectonic areas, and insight into the pathogenesis of certain cortical disorders in humans.
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            Automated manifold surgery: constructing geometrically accurate and topologically correct models of the human cerebral cortex.

            Highly accurate surface models of the cerebral cortex are becoming increasingly important as tools in the investigation of the functional organization of the human brain. The construction of such models is difficult using current neuroimaging technology due to the high degree of cortical folding. Even single voxel misclassifications can result in erroneous connections being created between adjacent banks of a sulcus, resulting in a topologically inaccurate model. These topological defects cause the cortical model to no longer be homeomorphic to a sheet, preventing the accurate inflation, flattening, or spherical morphing of the reconstructed cortex. Surface deformation techniques can guarantee the topological correctness of a model, but are time-consuming and may result in geometrically inaccurate models. In order to address this need we have developed a technique for taking a model of the cortex, detecting and fixing the topological defects while leaving that majority of the model intact, resulting in a surface that is both geometrically accurate and topologically correct.
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              A tension-based theory of morphogenesis and compact wiring in the central nervous system.

              Many structural features of the mammalian central nervous system can be explained by a morphogenetic mechanism that involves mechanical tension along axons, dendrites and glial processes. In the cerebral cortex, for example, tension along axons in the white matter can explain how and why the cortex folds in a characteristic species-specific pattern. In the cerebellum, tension along parallel fibres can explain why the cortex is highly elongated but folded like an accordion. By keeping the aggregate length of axonal and dendritic wiring low, tension should contribute to the compactness of neural circuitry throughout the adult brain.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cereb Cortex
                cercor
                cercor
                Cerebral Cortex (New York, NY)
                Oxford University Press
                1047-3211
                1460-2199
                August 2008
                12 December 2007
                12 December 2007
                : 18
                : 8
                : 1973-1980
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA
                [2 ]Division of Health Sciences and Technology and the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Stata Center, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
                [3 ]Computer Science and AI Lab (CSAIL), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
                [4 ]McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
                [5 ]Institute of Medicine (IME), Research Center Jülich, D-52428 Jülich, Germany
                [6 ]Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Aachen Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule University, 52074 Aachen, Germany
                [7 ]C.&O. Vogt-Institut fur Hirnforschung, Heinrich Heine Universitat, D-40225 Dusseldorf, Germany
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Bruce Fischl, Athinoula A Martinos Center, Massachussetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Buliding 149, 13th Street, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA. Email: fischl@ 123456nmr.mgh.harvard.edu .
                Article
                10.1093/cercor/bhm225
                2474454
                18079129
                1e8a3351-dc87-4935-b5e1-c8dd54fb717f
                © 2007 The Authors

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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                Categories
                Articles

                Neurology
                microscopic architecture,morphometry,cerebral cortex,macroscopic landmarks
                Neurology
                microscopic architecture, morphometry, cerebral cortex, macroscopic landmarks

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