Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Mind over gray matter: New map lays out brain's cerebral cortex

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WASHINGTON ( Reuters)Neuroscien­tists acting as cartograph­ers of the human mind have devised the most comprehens­ive map ever made of the cerebral cortex, the part of the brain responsibl­e for higher cognitive functions such as abstract thought, language and memory.

Using MRI images from the brains of 210 people, the researcher­s said on Wednesday they were able to pinpoint 180 distinct areas in the cerebral cortex, the brain's thin, wrinkly outermost layer made of so- called gray matter.

These areas were present in both the left and right hemisphere­s of the cerebral cortex. More than half, 97 of them, were previously unknown. The researcher­s nailed down the specific function of some of the areas, but said they were only scratching the surface on understand­ing what all of the areas did.

The map could assist in the study of brain maladies such as autism, schizophre­nia, dementia and epilepsy, and shed light on the difference­s between the brains of people with such conditions and healthy people, the researcher­s said.

Neuroscien­tist Matthew Glasser of Washington University in St. Louis, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature, said the map also may be useful in neurosurge­ry, helping surgeons avoid damaging important brain areas involved in speech or movement.

"The cerebral cortex underlies most of human cognition, providing such functions as speech production and understand­ing, ability to use tools, ability to make decisions, et cetera," Glasser said.

"Indeed, it is responsibl­e for the stuff that makes us human, and the cortex has expanded dramatical­ly in humans relative to our closest living relatives, the apes."

The regions were mapped based on features such as cortical thickness and the amount of insulation, called myelin, around nerve- cell connection­s.

The researcher­s also used MRI data on cortical activity when people carry out tasks such as listening to stories, computing math problems and looking at other people making various facial expression­s.

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 ??  ?? A 180-area multimodal human cortical parcellati­on on the left and right hemisphere surfaces of the human brain (REUTERS)
A 180-area multimodal human cortical parcellati­on on the left and right hemisphere surfaces of the human brain (REUTERS)

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