| Literature DB >> 19597545 |
Abstract
In order to glean information about hominin (or other) brains that no longer exist, details of external neuroanatomy that are reproduced on endocranial casts (endocasts) from fossilized braincases may be described and interpreted. Despite being, of necessity, speculative, such studies can be very informative when conducted in light of the literature on comparative neuroanatomy, paleontology, and functional imaging studies. Albert Einstein's brain no longer exists in an intact state, but there are photographs of it in various views. Applying techniques developed from paleoanthropology, previously unrecognized details of external neuroanatomy are identified on these photographs. This information should be of interest to paleoneurologists, comparative neuroanatomists, historians of science, and cognitive neuroscientists. The new identifications of cortical features should also be archived for future scholars who will have access to additional information from improved functional imaging technology. Meanwhile, to the extent possible, Einstein's cerebral cortex is investigated in light of available data about variation in human sulcal patterns. Although much of his cortical surface was unremarkable, regions in and near Einstein's primary somatosensory and motor cortices were unusual. It is possible that these atypical aspects of Einstein's cerebral cortex were related to the difficulty with which he acquired language, his preference for thinking in sensory impressions including visual images rather than words, and his early training on the violin.Entities:
Keywords: Albert Einstein; Brodmann's area 40; cortical asymmetries; parietal operculum; sensory and motor cortices; sulcal patterns
Year: 2009 PMID: 19597545 PMCID: PMC2704009 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.18.003.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Evol Neurosci ISSN: 1663-070X
Figure 1Photographs of Einstein's brain that were taken in 1955, adapted from Witelson et al. (. (A) Dorsal view, (B) left lateral view, (C) right lateral view. Sulci: angular (a), anterior occipital (a), ascending limb of the posterior Sylvian fissure (aSyl), central fissure (red lines), diagonal (d), descending terminal portion of aSyl (dt), inferior frontal (fi), middle frontal (fm), superior frontal (fs), horizontal limb of the posterior Sylvian fissure (hSyl), intraparietal (ip), precentral inferior and superior (pci, pcs), marginal precentral (pma), medial precentral (pme), postcentral inferior and superior (pti, pts), ascending ramus of Sylvian fissure (R), subcentral posterior sulcus (scp), middle temporal (tm), superior temporal sulcus (ts), unnamed sulcus in postcentral gyrus (u). Other features: branching point between hSyl and aSyl (white dots, B), hand motor cortex knob (K, shaded in A, C), termination of aSyl (white dots, S).
Figure 2Widths of pre- and postcentral gyri (mm) in left and right hemispheres from 25 human cadavers. Mean widths and ranges are summarized from Ono et al. (1990, pp. 152–153). S, primary somatosensory cortex; M, motor cortex. As illustrated, the range for the medial measurement for the right M is 9–22 mm rather than 9–12 mm, which is a typo in Ono et al. (C. D. Abernathey, personal communication). Note that, contrary to Einstein's brain in which the postcentral gyri are noticeably wider in their lateral compared to medial ends, particularly in the left hemisphere (Figures 1B,C), the widths of pre- and postcentral gyri in normal individuals are very similar along their entire lengths and manifest little asymmetry between hemispheres.
Figure 3(A) Typical distribution of Brodmann's areas 39, 40, and 43 (Brodmann, 1909). BA 40 constitutes the supramarginal gyrus, which caps the fissure between B and S. A minimal region that encloses BA 40 may be defined by the Sylvian fissure, and lines that connect the end of scp with S and the latter with the end of an unnamed sulcus that extends caudally from B. (B) These landmarks are available in Einstein's left hemisphere and enclose an area that probably approximates a minimal surface representation of BA 40. A supramarginal gyrus containing BA 40 did not cap aSyl, however, because the latter was continuous with pti.