Korbinian Brodmann

Korbinian Brodmann was a pioneer in defining and classifying multiple areas of the cerebral cortex. Brodmann received his medical degree in 1895, broadening his medical practices throughout Germany. His work laid the foundation for continued efforts and to date, his work has yet to be replaced or refuted. The works of Brodmann reached into neurology, psychiatry, physiology, zoology, and anthropology. Brodmann had many influences including Alois Alzheimer, Karl Weigert, Franz Nissl, and Ludwig Edinger (Loukas et. al., 2011).

The 52 Areas of Brodmann’s Discovery (provided by Bernal & Perdomo, 2008):

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Loukas, M., MD, PhD, Pennell, C., MSc, Groat, C., MSc, Tubbs, S., R., MS, PA-C, PhD, Cohen-Gadol, A., A., MD, MSc. (2011). Korbinian Brodmann (1868–1918) and His Contributions to Mapping the Cerebral Cortex, Neurosurgery, 68(1), pp. 6–11. https://doi.org/10.1227/NEU.0b013e3181fc5cac

Zilles, K. (2018). Brodmann: a pioneer of human brain mapping—his impact on concepts of cortical organization, Brain, 141(11), pp. 3262–3278. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awy273

Bernal, B., MD., Perdomo, J. (2008). Brodmann’s Interactive Atlashttp://www.fmriconsulting.com/brodmann/Introduction.html

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Korbinian Brodmann