Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. The description of human white matter [[pathway]]s experienced a tremendous improvement, thanks to the advancement of [[neuroimaging]] and [[dissection]] techniques. The downside of this progress is the production of redundant and conflicting [[literature]], bound by specific studies' methods and aims. The [[Superior Longitudinal System]] (SLS), encompassing the [[arcuate]] (AF) and the [[superior longitudinal fasciculi]] (SLF), becomes an illustrative example of this fundamental issue, being one of the most studied white matter association pathways of the brain. Vavassori et al. provided a complete illustration of this white matter fiber system's current definition, from its early descriptions in the nineteenth century to its most recent characterizations. They proposed a review of both [[in vivo]] [[diffusion magnetic resonance imaging]]-based [[tractography]] and anatomical dissection studies, enclosing all the information available up to date. Based on these findings, they reconstructed the wiring diagram of the SLS, highlighting a substantial variability in the description of its cortical sites of termination and the taxonomy and partonomy that characterize the system. They aimed to level up discrepancies in the [[literature]] by proposing a parallel across the various [[nomenclature]]. Consistent with the topographical arrangement already documented for commissural and projection pathways, they suggested approaching the SLS organization as an orderly and continuous wiring [[diagram]], respecting a medio-lateral palisading [[topography]] between the different [[frontal]], [[parietal]], [[occipital]], and [[temporal]] [[gyri]] rather than in terms of individualized fascicles. A better and complete description of the fine organization of [[white matter]] association pathways' [[connectivity]] is fundamental for a better understanding of brain function and their clinical and neurosurgical applications ((Vavassori L, Sarubbo S, Petit L. Hodology of the superior longitudinal system of the human brain: a historical perspective, the current controversies, and a proposal. Brain Struct Funct. 2021 Apr 21. doi: 10.1007/s00429-021-02265-0. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 33881634.)). superior_longitudinal_fasciculi.txt Last modified: 2024/06/07 02:51by 127.0.0.1