InicioMéxicoThe revolutionary "atlas" that is helping scientists map the brain's final frontier

The revolutionary “atlas” that is helping scientists map the brain’s final frontier


A pink 3D illustration of a human brain bathed in blue and white light is set against a blue background

Image source, Getty Images

photo caption, The human brain contains about 86 billion neurons. The brain stem is less than 1 billion.

For more than a century, neuroscientists have studied the human brain much as ancient cartographers mapped unknown lands: assembling a vast panorama from scattered observations.

Even today, pathologists who diagnose disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease typically examine a handful of tissue samples from an organ containing some 80 billion neurons. Much remains invisible.

That’s why scientists at the Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Center (SCBC) at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras (IIT-M) believe they have taken an important step toward filling one of the biggest gaps in neuroscience.

They have produced what they describe as the world’s most detailed three-dimensional atlas of the human brainstem, a digital map that allows scientists to seamlessly scroll from MRI scans of the entire brain down to individual nerve cells.

Called ANCHOR (the acronym in English for Atlas of the Neurochemical Characterization of the Human Brainstem with 3D Reconstruction), it combines more than 500 sections of brain tissue from fetuses, children and adults.



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