Association fiber

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Association fiber
Diagram showing principal systems of association fibers in the cerebrum.
Dissection of cerebral cortex and brainstem showing association fibers and insular cortex after removal of its superficial grey matter
Details
Identifiers
Latinfibrae associationis telencephali
TA98A14.1.00.016
A14.1.09.553
TA25593
FMA75241
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

Association fibers are axons that connect cortical areas within the same cerebral hemisphere.[1]

In human neuroanatomy,

commissural fibers.[1]

The association fibers unite different parts of the same cerebral hemisphere, and are of two kinds: (1) short association fibers that connect adjacent gyri; (2) long association fibers that make connections between more distant parts.

Short association fibers

Many of the short association fibers (also called arcuate or "U"-fibers) lie immediately beneath the gray substance of the cortex of the hemispheres, and connect together adjacent gyri.[2] Some pass from one wall of the sulcus to the other.[2]

Long association fibers

The long association fibers connect the more widely separated gyri and are grouped into bundles.[2] They include the following:

Name From To
uncinate fasciculus frontal lobe temporal lobe
cingulum
cingulate gyrus
entorhinal cortex
superior longitudinal fasciculus frontal lobe occipital lobe
inferior longitudinal fasciculus occipital lobe temporal lobe
vertical occipital fasciculus inferior parietal lobule fusiform gyrus
occipitofrontal fasciculus occipital lobe frontal lobe
Arcuate fasciculus frontal lobe temporal lobe

Diffusion tensor imaging
is a non-invasive method to study the course of association fibers.

See also

References

External links