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Abstract
The construction of the human nervous system is a distinctly complex although highly
regulated process. Human tissue inaccessibility has impeded a molecular understanding
of the developmental specializations from which our unique cognitive capacities arise.
A confluence of recent technological advances in genomics and stem cell-based tissue
modeling is laying the foundation for a new understanding of human neural development
and dysfunction in neuropsychiatric disease. Here, we review recent progress on uncovering
the cellular and molecular principles of human brain organogenesis in vivo as well
as using organoids and assembloids in vitro to model features of human evolution and
disease.