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The Intrinsic Shape of Human and Macaque Primary Visual Cortex
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press, 2008.
-
Abstract
- Previous studies have reported considerable variability in primary visual cortex (V1) shape in both humans and macaques. Here, we demonstrate that much of this variability is due to the pattern of cortical folds particular to an individual and that V1 shape is similar among individual humans and macaques as well as between these 2 species. Human V1 was imaged ex vivo using high-resolution (200 microm) magnetic resonance imaging at 7 T. Macaque V1 was identified in published histological serial section data. Manual tracings of the stria of Gennari were used to construct a V1 surface, which was computationally flattened with minimal metric distortion of the cortical surface. Accurate flattening allowed investigation of intrinsic geometric features of cortex, which are largely independent of the highly variable cortical folds. The intrinsic shape of V1 was found to be similar across human subjects using both nonparametric boundary matching and a simple elliptical shape model fit to the data and is very close to that of the macaque monkey. This result agrees with predictions derived from current models of V1 topography. In addition, V1 shape similarity suggests that similar developmental mechanisms are responsible for establishing V1 shape in these 2 species.
- Subjects :
- Similarity (geometry)
Cognitive Neuroscience
Models, Neurological
Macaque
Flattening
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
Imaging, Three-Dimensional
Species Specificity
Distortion
biology.animal
Cortex (anatomy)
medicine
Animals
Humans
Cortical surface
Probability
Visual Cortex
Brain Diseases
biology
Articles
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
medicine.anatomical_structure
Visual cortex
Metric (mathematics)
Macaca
Neuroscience
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....86c8d00ef95c20bc638fd66d1fc88869