The anatomical segregation of the frontal cortex: what does it mean for function?
- PMID: 16881264
- DOI: 10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70392-7
The anatomical segregation of the frontal cortex: what does it mean for function?
Abstract
The frontal cortex consists of numerous areas, each with a special architecture (cyto-, myelo-, receptorarchitecture, etc.), connectivity and function. Quantitative tools of the analysis may assist in defining these cortical areas, and their position in a hierarchy of cortical regions and subregions. They enable a reliable definition of areal borders, and the consideration of intersubject variability. In our particular case, fMRI studies investigating certain aspects of cognitive control indicated to a rather circumscribed area in the posterior frontolateral cortex--the so-called IFJ area--which seems to correspond anatomically to a previously uncharted cortical area dorsally to area 44 as detected in histological sections of post mortem brains.
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