A natural cortical axis connecting the outside and inside of the human brain

Author:

Hilgetag Claus C.12ORCID,Goulas Alexandros1ORCID,Changeux Jean-Pierre34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Computational Neuroscience, University Medical Center Eppendorf, Hamburg University, Hamburg, Germany

2. Department of Health Sciences, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA

3. CNRS UMR 3571, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France

4. Communications Cellulaires, Collège de France, Paris, France

Abstract

Abstract What structural and connectivity features of the human brain help to explain the extraordinary human cognitive abilities? We recently proposed a set of relevant connectomic fundamentals, some of which arise from the size scaling of the human brain relative to other primate brains, while others of these fundamentals may be uniquely human. In particular, we suggested that the remarkable increase of the size of the human brain due to its prolonged prenatal development has brought with it an increased sparsification, hierarchical modularization, as well as increased depth and cytoarchitectonic differentiation of brain networks. These characteristic features are complemented by a shift of projection origins to the upper layers of many cortical areas as well as the significantly prolonged postnatal development and plasticity of the upper cortical layers. Another fundamental aspect of cortical organization that has emerged in recent research is the alignment of diverse features of evolution, development, cytoarchitectonics, function, and plasticity along a principal, natural cortical axis from sensory (“outside”) to association (“inside”) areas. Here we highlight how this natural axis is integrated in the characteristic organization of the human brain. In particular, the human brain displays a developmental expansion of outside areas and a stretching of the natural axis such that outside areas are more widely separated from each other and from inside areas than in other species. We outline some functional implications of this characteristic arrangement.

Funder

Human Brain Project

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications,General Neuroscience

Reference52 articles.

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