AI Article Synopsis

  • Comparative neuroanatomy studies help us understand brain structure and function, revealing insights into brain development, evolution, and unique human features.
  • Recent advancements in diffusion MRI and quantitative MRI allow researchers to compare brain connectivity in humans and non-human primates, specifically looking at vertical occipital connections.
  • The review discusses current limitations in these imaging techniques, explores future research directions, and emphasizes that findings can extend beyond visual cortex to other white matter tracts across species.

Article Abstract

Comparative neuroanatomy studies improve understanding of brain structure and function and provide insight regarding brain development, evolution, and also what features of the brain are uniquely human. With modern methods such as diffusion MRI (dMRI) and quantitative MRI (qMRI), we are able to measure structural features of the brain with the same methods across human and non-human primates. In this review article, we discuss how recent dMRI measurements of vertical occipital connections in humans and macaques can be compared with previous findings from invasive anatomical studies that examined connectivity, including relatively forgotten classic strychnine neuronography studies. We then review recent progress in understanding the neuroanatomy of vertical connections within the occipitotemporal cortex by combining modern quantitative MRI and classical histological measurements in human and macaque. Finally, we a) discuss current limitations of dMRI and tractography and b) consider potential paths for future investigations using dMRI and tractography for comparative neuroanatomical studies of white matter tracts between species. While we focus on vertical association connections in visual cortex in the present paper, this same approach can be applied to other white matter tracts. Similar efforts are likely to continue to advance our understanding of the neuroanatomical features of the brain that are shared across species, as well as to distinguish the features that are uniquely human.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6491271PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neures.2018.10.011DOI Listing

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