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      The evolution of distributed association networks in the human brain.

      Trends in Cognitive Sciences
      Elsevier BV
      cerebellum, cortical circuits, default network, prefrontal cortex, prospection, social cognition

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          Abstract

          The human cerebral cortex is vastly expanded relative to other primates and disproportionately occupied by distributed association regions. Here we offer a hypothesis about how association networks evolved their prominence and came to possess circuit properties vital to human cognition. The rapid expansion of the cortical mantle may have untethered large portions of the cortex from strong constraints of molecular gradients and early activity cascades that lead to sensory hierarchies. What fill the gaps between these hierarchies are densely interconnected networks that widely span the cortex and mature late into development. Limitations of the tethering hypothesis are discussed as well as its broad implications for understanding critical features of the human brain as a byproduct of size scaling.

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          Journal
          24210963
          10.1016/j.tics.2013.09.017

          cerebellum,cortical circuits,default network,prefrontal cortex,prospection,social cognition

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