Marmoset Brain Connectivity Atlas

 

Supplementary material
The web page https://www.marmosetbrain.org/hemispheric-asymmetry contains the most recent versions of the supplementary materials for the article:

Highly Consistent Anatomical Asymmetry in a Small Primate Brain: Left is Always Larger in the Marmoset Monkey

Inaki C. Mundinano, Nafiseh Atapour, Kun Jiang, Ranshikha Samandra, Cirong Liu, Farshad Mansouri* and Marcello G. P. Rosa
Abstract

Although lateralisation of brain function is relatively common in animals, this is rarely accompanied by overt anatomical asymmetries. Morphological differences between the cerebral hemispheres are well established Hominoids and other large primate species, but regarded as subtler, or inconsistent, in other primates. We demonstrate that the left hemisphere is reproducibly larger than the right hemisphere in one of the smallest primates, the marmoset. Among 208 adult marmosets the left hemisphere was on average 2.31% larger than the right (range 0.22%- 4.37%). This asymmetry develops during early postnatal life, persists throughout adulthood, and is primarily due to differences in the volume of cortex linked to social cognition, including in the lateral and inferior temporal lobe areas and ventral premotor areas. These results challenge the notion that the morphological asymmetry between the hemispheres is linked to the evolution of large brains and progressive reduction in the relative connectivity between hemispheres.

The following datasets are available for download:
  1. Numerical data used in the generation of all graphs in the paper, downloadable as a single Excel file.