This title appears in the Scientific Report :
2001
Advances in cytoarchitectonic mapping of the human cerebral cortex
Advances in cytoarchitectonic mapping of the human cerebral cortex
Figure1. Location of areas 44 (in rod) and 45 (in yellow) in two exemplary coronal sections of a post mortem brain and details of the lateral views of the hemispheres after three-dimensional reconstruction and surface rendering. Left in the brain is left in the image. artf = ascending branch of the...
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Personal Name(s): | Amunts, K. |
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Zilles, K. | |
Contributing Institute: |
Institut für Medizin; IME |
Published in: | Neuroimaging Clinics of North America, 11 (2001) S. 151 - 169 |
Imprint: |
[S.l.]
Elsevier
2001
|
Physical Description: |
151 - 169 |
Document Type: |
Journal Article |
Research Program: |
Zerebrale Repräsentation |
Series Title: |
Neuroimaging Clinics of North America
11 |
Subject (ZB): | |
Publikationsportal JuSER |
Figure1. Location of areas 44 (in rod) and 45 (in yellow) in two exemplary coronal sections of a post mortem brain and details of the lateral views of the hemispheres after three-dimensional reconstruction and surface rendering. Left in the brain is left in the image. artf = ascending branch of the lateral fissure; hrlf = horizontal branch of the lateral fissure; ifs = inferior frontal sulcus; prcs = precentral sulcus. (See also Fig. 6 in article by Amunts and Zilles.)Figure 2. Population maps of two different cortical areas superimposed on the standard reference brain: Brodmann's area 17 (visual cortex) and 45 (part of Broca's region). The overlap is color coded for each voxel of the standard brain. (e.g., yellow = overlap of seven (out of 10) brains, red = overlap of all 10 brains. Orientation of the brain according to the AC-PC line.(126) Nonlinear warping tools increase the overlap of the individual cortical areas in the reference space when compared with the application of only linear tools (compare left with middle section at z = -5). Both regions were defined in the same set of brains, however, intersubject variability is larger in area 45 than in area 17. (See also Fig. 7 in article by Amunts and Zilles.) |