of corpus callosum and its named parts The corpus callosum forms the floor of the
longitudinal fissure that separates the two
cerebral hemispheres. Part of the corpus callosum forms the roof of the
lateral ventricles. The corpus callosum has four main parts – individual nerve tracts that connect different parts of the hemispheres. These are the
rostrum, the
genu, the
trunk or
body, and the
splenium. The front part of the corpus callosum, towards the
frontal lobes, is called the genu ("knee"). The genu curves downward and backward in front of the
septum pellucidum, diminishing greatly in thickness. The lower, much thinner part is the rostrum and is connected below with the
lamina terminalis, which stretches from the
interventricular foramina to the recess at the base of the
optic stalk. The rostrum is named for its resemblance to a
bird's beak. The end part of the corpus callosum, towards the
cerebellum, is called the splenium. This is the thickest part, and overlaps the
tela choroidea of the
third ventricle and the
midbrain, and ends in a thick, convex, free border. Splenium translates as "bandage" in
Greek. The trunk of the corpus callosum lies between the splenium and the genu. The
callosal sulcus is a
sulcus that separates the corpus callosum from the
cingulate gyrus.
Relations On either side of the corpus callosum, the fibers radiate in the
white matter and pass to the various parts of the
cerebral cortex; those curving forward from the genu into the
frontal lobes constitute the forceps minor (also forceps anterior) and those curving backward from the splenium into the
occipital lobes, the forceps major (also forceps posterior).
Neuronal fibers The size, amount of myelination, and density of the fibers in the subregions relate to the functions of the brain regions they connect. Myelination is the process of coating neurons with myelin, which helps the transfer of information between neurons. The process is believed to occur until an individual's thirties with peak growth in the first decade of one's life. Thinner, lightly myelinated fibers are slower conducting and they connect the association and prefrontal areas. Thicker and fast-conducting fibers connect the visual and motor areas. The
tractogram pictured shows, from left to right, the nerve tracts from six segments of the corpus callosum, providing linking of the cortical regions between the cerebral hemispheres. Those of the genu are shown in coral; of the premotor, green; of the sensory-motor, purple; of the parietal, pink; of the temporal, yellow; and of the splenium, blue. Thinner
axons in the genu connect the
prefrontal cortex between the two halves of the brain; these fibers arise from a fork-like bundle of fibers from the tapetum, the forceps minor. Thicker axons in the trunk of the corpus callosum interconnect areas of the
motor cortex, with proportionately more of the corpus callosum dedicated to supplementary motor regions including
Broca's area. The splenium communicates
somatosensory information between the two halves of the
parietal lobe and the
visual cortex at the
occipital lobe. These are the fibers of the forceps major. A study of five- to eighteen-year-olds found a positive correlation between age and callosal thickness. An
MRI study found that the midsagittal corpus callosum cross-sectional area is, after controlling for brain size, on average, proportionately larger in females. Using
diffusion tensor sequences on MRI machines, the rate at which molecules diffuse in and out of a specific area of tissue,
anisotropy can be measured and used as an indirect measurement of anatomical connection strength. These sequences have found consistent sex differences in human corpus callosal shape and microstructure: specifically, increased signal intensity and decreased fractional anisotropy in the female corpus callosum, as compared with that of the male. Analysis by shape and size has also been used to study specific three-dimensional mathematical relationships with MRIs, and have found consistent and statistically significant differences between sexes. Specific algorithms have found significant differences between the two sexes in over 70% of cases in one review. A 2005 study on the sizes and structures of the corpus callosum in
transgender people found it to be structurally more in line with their declared gender than their assigned sex. ==Correlates of size with handedness==