Preface to the Special Issue

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  • Ralph Spintge MD
  • Joanne V. Loewy DA, LCAT, MT-BC

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https://doi.org/10.47513/mmd.v5i4.189

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Neuroimaging in current times has provided us with structural and functional insights into the human brain, which up until now have been unmatched in science history. However, even with the most recent scientific developments at hand, the 3-D brain images gained using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are limited by poor resolution of 1 mm in each direction.

Katrin Amunts, professor of structural–functional brain mapping, and her colleagues at the Jülich Aachen Research Alliance in Germany recently sought to fill the image gap by building a “BigBrain model,” exceeding the typical resolution by a factor of 50 in each direction.1 The new 3-D model …

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Sportklinik Hellersen and University of Music and Drama Hamburg, Regional Pain Center, Lüdenscheid, Germany

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The Louis Armstrong Center for Music & Medicine, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY, USA

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Amunts K, Lepage C, Borgeat L, et al. BigBrain: an ultrahighresolution

D human brain model. Science. 2013;340(6139):

-1475.

Simone Dalla Bella, Nina Kraus, Katie Overy, et al. The neurosciences of music III disorders and plasticity. Ann New York Acad Sci. 2009;1169:1-569.