I don’t know enough to evaluate your claims, but more importantly, I can’t even just take your word for everything because I don’t actually know what you’re saying without asking a whole bunch of followup questions. So hopefully we can hash some of this out on the phone.
An estimation of the absolute number of axons indicates that human cortical areas are sparsely connected
Burke Q. Rosen, Eric Halgren
Abstract
The tracts between cortical areas are conceived as playing a central role in cortical information processing, but their actual numbers have never been determined in humans. Here, we estimate the absolute number of axons linking cortical areas from a whole-cortex diffusion MRI (dMRI) connectome, calibrated using the histologically measured callosal fiber density. Median connectivity is estimated as approximately 6,200 axons between cortical areas within hemisphere and approximately 1,300 axons interhemispherically, with axons connecting functionally related areas surprisingly sparse. For example, we estimate that <5% of the axons in the trunk of the arcuate and superior longitudinal fasciculi connect Wernicke’s and Broca’s areas. These results suggest that detailed information is transmitted between cortical areas either via linkage of the dense local connections or via rare, extraordinarily privileged long-range connections.
I don’t know enough to evaluate your claims, but more importantly, I can’t even just take your word for everything because I don’t actually know what you’re saying without asking a whole bunch of followup questions. So hopefully we can hash some of this out on the phone.
Sorry that my attempts to communicate technical concepts don’t always go smoothly!
I keep trying to answer your questions about ‘what I think I know and how I think I know it’ with dumps of lists of papers. Not ideal!
But sometimes I’m not sure what else to do, so.… here’s a paper!
https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3001575
An estimation of the absolute number of axons indicates that human cortical areas are sparsely connected
Burke Q. Rosen, Eric Halgren
Abstract
The tracts between cortical areas are conceived as playing a central role in cortical information processing, but their actual numbers have never been determined in humans. Here, we estimate the absolute number of axons linking cortical areas from a whole-cortex diffusion MRI (dMRI) connectome, calibrated using the histologically measured callosal fiber density. Median connectivity is estimated as approximately 6,200 axons between cortical areas within hemisphere and approximately 1,300 axons interhemispherically, with axons connecting functionally related areas surprisingly sparse. For example, we estimate that <5% of the axons in the trunk of the arcuate and superior longitudinal fasciculi connect Wernicke’s and Broca’s areas. These results suggest that detailed information is transmitted between cortical areas either via linkage of the dense local connections or via rare, extraordinarily privileged long-range connections.