Anatomy and white matter connections of the lateral occipital cortex
0301 basic medicine
03 medical and health sciences
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
0302 clinical medicine
Case-Control Studies
Dissection
Neural Pathways
Cadaver
Humans
Occipital Lobe
White Matter
Healthy Volunteers
DOI:
10.1007/s00276-019-02371-z
Publication Date:
2019-11-16T13:01:52Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
White matter tracts link different regions of the brain, and the known functions of those interconnected regions may offer clues about the roles that white matter tracts play in information relay. The authors of this report discuss the structure and function of the lateral occipital lobe and how the lateral occipital lobe communicates with other regions via white matter tracts.The authors used generalized q-sampling imaging and cadaveric brain dissections to uncover the subcortical white matter connections of the lateral occipital lobe. The authors created GQI of ten healthy controls and dissected ten cadaveric brains.The middle longitudinal fasciculus, vertical occipital fasciculus, inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, optic radiations, and a diverse array of U-shaped fibers connect the lateral occipital lobe to itself, parts of the temporal, parietal, and medial occipital cortices. The complex functional processes attributed to the lateral occipital lobe, including object recognition, facial recognition, and motion perception are likely related to the subcortical white matter tracts described within this study.There was good concordance between the white matter tracts generated using GQI and the white matter tracts that were found after dissection of the cadaveric brains. This article presents the anatomic connections of the lateral occipital lobe and discusses the associated functions.
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