## Abstract Little is known about genetic influences on the volume of subcortical brain structures in adult humans, particularly whether there is regional specificity of genetic effects. Understanding patterns of genetic covariation among volumes of subcortical structures may provide insight into t
Looking for the lunate sulcus: A magnetic resonance imaging study in modern humans
β Scribed by Allen, John S. ;Bruss, Joel ;Damasio, Hanna
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 325 KB
- Volume
- 288A
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1552-4884
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The position of the lunate sulcus in fossil endocasts (when it can be determined) may serve as a potential marker of cognitive development in extinct hominid species. While the lunate sulcus is reliably present in the brains of great apes and forms the anterolateral boundary of the primary visual cortex, in humans its presentation is much more variable, and even if present, it does not correspond to a functional region. Grafton Elliot Smith, who named the lunate sulcus, claimed that it was homologous in humans and the great apes. Using highβresolution MRI, we assessed the presence/absence and course of the lunate sulcus in 110 adult subjects. We found that in the vast majority of cases, lunate sulci identified on the surface of the occipital lobe are actually composed of smaller sulcal segments that converge into an apparently continuous composite lunate sulcus. We found only 3 examples in 220 hemispheres (1.4%) of continuous lunate sulci that resembled ape lunates in form (albeit in a more posterior position). Composite lunate sulci were found in 32.7% of left hemispheres and 26.4% of right hemispheres. These results, combined with those from histological and functional imaging studies, indicate that human and ape lunate sulci are not homologous structures. We suggest that the extent of functional reorganization of the occipital region during hominid evolution has been underestimated, and that changes in this region were not just passively shaped by expansion of parietal association cortex. Anat Rec Part A, 288A:867β876, 2006. Β© 2006 WileyβLiss, Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## Objective To evaluate the rate of progression of cartilage loss in the knee joint using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and to evaluate potential risk factors for more rapid cartilage loss. ## Methods We evaluated baseline and followup MRIs of the knees in 43 patients (minimum ti
## Abstract ## Purpose To examine the changes in the longitudinal relaxation times (ΞR1) induced in pig myocardium and blood following injections of 5, 10, and 15 ΞΌmol mangafodipir trisodium (MnβDPDP) or MnCl~2~/kg of body weight (b.w.). ## Materials and Methods Twelve pigs were divided into two