The human brain’s characteristic wrinkles help to drive how it works

A model of the brain’s geometry better explains neuronal activity than a model based on the ‘connectome’.

The wrinkles that give the human brain its familiar walnut-like appearance have a large effect on brain activity, in much the same way that the shape of a bell determines the quality of its sound, a study suggests1. The findings run counter to a commonly held theory about which aspect of brain anatomy drives function.

The study’s authors compared the influence of two components of the brain’s physical structure: the outer folds of the cerebral cortex — the area where most higher-level brain activity occurs — and the connectome, the web of nerves that links distinct regions of the cerebral cortex.

Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-01774-8