Cross-Species Cortical Geometry Reveals Conserved Gradients Across Primates and Human-Specific Expansion

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Abstract

The primate cerebral cortex, characterized by its complex structural geometry, underlies advanced cognitive functions and represents a defining feature distinguishing primates from other mammals. However, cross-species patterns of cortical geometry and the links between human cortical geometry and transcriptional architecture remain poorly understood. We developed a geometry-based cross-species cortical alignment framework to systematically investigate the similarities and differences in structural connectivity and cortical expansion characteristics among macaques, chimpanzees, and humans, and additionally explored the transcriptional underpinnings of human cortical geometry. Our analysis revealed conserved spatial patterns of cortical geometric features across species, providing the foundation for constructing a cross-species structural common space to support the alignment framework. We found that primary sensory, somatomotor, and face-selective regions exhibited high structural connectivity similarity across species, whereas prefrontal and parietal association cortices displayed significant divergence. We also identified disproportionate cortical expansion in the default mode network, with a consistent expansion trend across different evolutionary lineages in primates. Furthermore, neuroimage-transcription analysis indicated that cortical geometric features were correlated with transcriptional profiles enriched in neurodevelopmental and connectivity-related pathways. These results highlight a conserved yet hierarchically differentiated organization of the cerebral cortex in primates, providing new insights into the biological basis of human brain evolution.

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