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Issue 1064 coverWhite Matter in Cognitive Neuroscience: Advances in Diffusion Tensor Imaging and Its Applications Volume 1064 published December 2005
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1064: 162–183 (2005). doi: 10.1196/annals.1340.028
Copyright © 2005 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by FILLEY, C. M.
White Matter and Behavioral Neurology

CHRISTOPHER M. FILLEY

University of Colorado School of Medicine and Denver Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Denver, Colorado, USA

Address for correspondence: Christopher M. Filley, Behavioral Neurology Section, UCHSC, 4200 East Ninth Avenue, Denver, CO 80262. Voice: 303-315-6461; fax: 303-315-5867. christopher.filley{at}uchsc.edu

Although the study of higher brain function has traditionally focused on the cortical gray matter, recent years have witnessed the recognition that white matter also makes an important contribution to cognition and emotion. White matter comprises nearly half the brain volume and plays a key role in development, aging, and many neurologic and psychiatric disorders across the life span. More than 100 disorders exist in which white matter neuropathology is the primary or a prominent feature. A variety of neurobehavioral syndromes may result from these disorders; the concept of white matter dementia has been introduced as characteristic of many patients with white matter involvement, and a wide range of focal neurobehavioral syndromes and psychiatric disorders can also be related to dysfunction of myelinated tracts. Understanding the neurobehavioral aspects of white matter disorders is important for clinical diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and research on brain-behavior relationships. Central to these investigations is the use of modern neuroimaging techniques, which have already provided substantial information on the characterization of white matter and its disorders, and which promise to advance our knowledge further with continued innovation. Diffusion tensor imaging is an exciting method that will assist with the identification of critical white matter tracts in the brain, and the localization of specific lesions that can be correlated with neurobehavioral syndromes. A behavioral neurology of white matter is thus emerging in which clinical observation combined with sophisticated neuroimaging will enable elucidation of the role of white matter connectivity in the distributed neural networks subserving higher brain function.

Key Words: white matter • behavioral neurology • magnetic resonance imaging • dementia • diffusion tensor imaging




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