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BigBrain is a freely accessible high-resolution 3D digital atlas of the human brain, released in June 2013 by a team of researchers at the Montreal Neurological Institute and the German Forschungszentrum Jülich and is part of the European Human Brain Project. [1] The isotropic 3D spatial resolution of the BigBrain atlas is 20 μm, much finer ...
The original can be viewed here: Brain human normal inferior view with labels en.svg: . Modifications made by Dwstultz . I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license:
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Brain_human_normal_inferior_view.svg licensed with Cc-by-2.5 2009-10-13T16:18:05Z Beao 424x505 (209117 Bytes) Replaced right brain half with a clone of left brain half because they look excly the same in the picture. 2007-09-23T15:14:17Z Ysangkok 424x505 (417241 Bytes) removing credits
Now, after the lab team’s decade of close collaboration with scientists at Google, that data has turned into the most detailed map of a human brain sample ever created. 300 million images. The ...
Scientists have created a full map of an adult brain for the first time.. The 3D model of all of the neurons of a fruit fly, and the 50 million connections between them, is the first time that ...
File:Brain_human_normal_inferior_view.svg licensed with Cc-by-2.5 2009-10-13T16:18:05Z Beao 424x505 (209117 Bytes) Replaced right brain half with a clone of left brain half because they look excly the same in the picture. 2007-09-23T15:14:17Z Ysangkok 424x505 (417241 Bytes) removing credits
This image is in the public domain because it is a mere mechanical scan or photocopy of a public domain original, or – from the available evidence – is so similar to such a scan or photocopy that no copyright protection can be expected to arise. The original itself is in the public domain for the following reason:
Surface maps are sometimes used in addition to the 3D serial section maps [3] Besides the human brain, [4] brain atlases exist for the brains of the mouse, [5] rhesus macaques, [6] Drosophila, [7] pig [8] and others. Notable examples include the Allen Brain Atlas, BrainMaps, BigBrain, Infant Brain Atlas, [9] and the work of the International ...