Authors
PK Reardon, Jakob Seidlitz, Simon Vandekar, Siyuan Liu, Raihaan Patel, Min Tae M Park, Aaron Alexander-Bloch, Liv S Clasen, Jonathan D Blumenthal, Francois M Lalonde, Jay N Giedd, Ruben C Gur, Raquel E Gur, Jason P Lerch, M Mallar Chakravarty, Theodore D Satterthwaite, Russell T Shinohara, Armin Raznahan
Publication date
2018/6/15
Journal
Science
Volume
360
Issue
6394
Pages
1222-1227
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Brain size variation over primate evolution and human development is associated with shifts in the proportions of different brain regions. Individual brain size can vary almost twofold among typically developing humans, but the consequences of this for brain organization remain poorly understood. Using in vivo neuroimaging data from more than 3000 individuals, we find that larger human brains show greater areal expansion in distributed frontoparietal cortical networks and related subcortical regions than in limbic, sensory, and motor systems. This areal redistribution recapitulates cortical remodeling across evolution, manifests by early childhood in humans, and is linked to multiple markers of heightened metabolic cost and neuronal connectivity. Thus, human brain shape is systematically coupled to naturally occurring variations in brain size through a scaling map that integrates spatiotemporally diverse aspects of …
Total citations
20182019202020212022202320247284637343521
Scholar articles
PK Reardon, J Seidlitz, S Vandekar, S Liu, R Patel… - Science, 2018