This work presents a novel approach for modelling laminar myelin patterns in the human cortex in brain MR images on the basis of known cytoarchitecture. For the first time, it is possible to estimate intracortical contrast visible in quantitative ultra-high resolution MR images in specific primary and secondary cytoarchitectonic areas. The presented technique reveals different area-specific signatures which may help to study the spatial distribution of cortical T1 values and the distribution of cortical myelin in general. It may lead to a new discussion on the concordance of cyto- and myeloarchitectonic boundaries, given the absence of such concordance atlases. The modelled myelin patterns are quantitatively compared with data from human ultra-high resolution in-vivo 7T brain MR images (9 subjects). In the validation, the results are compared to one post-mortem brain sample and its ex-vivo MRI and histological data. Details of the analysis pipeline are provided. In the context of the increasing interest in advanced methods in brain segmentation and cortical architectural studies, the presented model helps to bridge the gap between the microanatomy revealed by classical histology and the macroanatomy visible in MRI.
Neural adaptation in sensory cortex serves important sensory functions, and is altered by various neurophsychiatric diseases. Although adaptation is a widely studied phenomenon, much remains unknown about its underlying mechanisms on a cortical circuit level. Here, we investigated repetition suppression as fundamental aspect of adaptation by layer-specific current source density analyses of synaptic mass activities in primary auditory cortex of anesthetized Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus). We disentangled different synaptic contributions to repetition suppression in different cortical layers, and separated thalamocortical from intracortical inputs by cortical silencing with GABAA-agonist muscimol. We systematically varied stimulus onset intervals and employed statistically robust model fitting based on bootstrapping to determine the full suppression kinetics of different synaptic responses in the steady state. Whereas thalamocortical input to granular and infragranular layers was governed by longer lasting repetition suppression, most likely reflecting depression of thalamocortical synapses, intracortical amplification in granular layers shortened the lifetime of suppression by re-enhancing granular responses mainly through synchronization of synaptic events. With increasing latency, the shorter lasting suppression kinetics observed in granular layers at early latencies (<100ms) passed on to deeper layers replacing the longer lasting infragranular suppression kinetics. Granular circuit dynamics can therefore actively shape neural adaptation across cortical layers.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.