Atlas of the Human Brain
Academic Press
5th Edition
Will be published approx. on 1. September 2026
Book
Hardback
456 pages
978-0-12-821915-7 (ISBN)
Description
Atlas of the Human Brain, Fifth Edition presents the anatomy of the brain at macroscopic and microscopic levels, featuring different aspects of brain morphology and topography with the most detailed and accurate delineations of brain structure. This new edition also features new diffusion tensor images (DTI), selected fiber tracts derived from tractography and depicted as "stipplings". It also includes annotated MR- and DT-images of the human brainstem. Totally new in this edition is the cortex map of von Economo and Koskinas in addition to the inclusion of Nissl plates with delineating of cortical areas (Brodmann's areas) in serial histological sections.This is an essential guide to those working with human brain imaging or attempting to relate their observations on experimental animals to humans.
More details
Edition
5th edition
Language
English
Place of publication
San Diego
United States
Publishing group
Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 305 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-12-821915-7 (9780128219157)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition

Juergen K Mai | Milan Majtanik | George Paxinos
Atlas of the Human Brain
Book
11/2015
4th Edition
Academic Press
€230.50
Shipment within 10-15 days
Persons
Professor Mai studied medicine in Freiburg, Germany, Vienna and UT Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, U.S.A. Student and Medical practices in Freiburg (Clinic for Neurosurgery), Berlin and Duesseldorf. Dissertation ("summa cum laude") and habilitation were awarded by the University of Duesseldorf: After a period as GP in private practice (Titisee-Neustadt) he became scientific assistant and senior assistant at the C. and O. Vogt-Institute for Brain Research, University of Duesseldorf (1972 - 1983) and Professor of Neuroanatomy at the Institute of Neuroanatomy, H.-Heine-University of Duesseldorf. He served as director of the Department of the Institute of Anatomy 1 until retirement in 2011. His main research interests are (i) the structural and molecular anatomy of the mammalian brain and (ii) expression patterns and regulation of terminal carbohydrates in development, cell activation and disease (III) operation planning in stereotactic neurosurgery. He works on a "Digital Brain Atlas for Planning and Interindividual Registration of Targets in Deep Brain Stimulation" and on a "Spatial Information Management Resource for the Human Brain". J. K. Mai has edited the catalogue of human brain sections from the Vogt collection; he is author and editor of several books, e.g. the awarded "Atlas of the Human Brain" (Academic Press/Elsevier, San Diego), "The Human Nervous System" (Academic Press/Elsevier, San Diego, Amsterdam, 3rd ed. 2012), Human Brain in Standard MNI Space: A Comprehensive Pocket Atlas (Academic Press/Elsevier, San Diego, 2017; with M. Majtanik), Funktionelle Anatomie fuer Zahnmediziner (Quintessenz, Berlin, 2nd. ed. 2008; Sensi Divini (ital., engl., ger, russ. eds). J. K. Mai is founder and CEO of MR-X-Brain GmbH. Milan Majtanik received his diploma in neuropsychology and training in neuroinformatics from the University of Bochum. He completed his diploma in mathematics and his PhD in psychology at the University of Duesseldorf. In his research at the Research Center Juelich he combined advanced analysis techniques in magnetoencephalography (synchronization tomography) with computational modelling in order to measure the impact of desynchronizing sensory stimulation on brain functions. His work on neural plasticity and desynchronizing neural stimulation provided framework for the developent of novel therapeutic techniques. He is currently focusing on the development of novel algorithms for high precision mapping and analysis of individual MRI scans. George Paxinos has written 62 books on the brain of humans, monkeys, rodents and birds. His first atlas, The Rat Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates, is the most cited neuroscience publication. His Atlas of the Human Brain received The Award for Excellence in Publishing in Medical Science (Assoc American Publishers, 1997) and The British Medical Association Illustrated Book Award (2016). His eco-fiction book A River Divided (georgepaxinos.com.au) considers the question of whether the brain in the Goldilocks Zone - the right "size? for survival.
Author
Clinic for Neurosurgery, Duesseldorf, Germany
MR-X-Brain GmbH, Duesseldorf, Germany
NHMRC Senior Principal, NeuRA, Australia
Content
I Overview II Background Information
A. Previous Editions
B. The Two Components of this Atlas (What is New in the 5th Edition?)
1: Three Atlases of the Brain in the Head
2: Atlas of the Human Brain in Stereotaxic (MNI) Space (AHB)
C. How to Use this Atlas (Layout of the Book)
D. Reproduction of Figures by Users of the Atlas
E. Acknowledgements and Dedication
III Three Atlases of the Brain in the Head
A: Materials and Methods
1 Anatomical Preparations
2 Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
3 Preparation and Photography of the Anatomical Slices
4 Preparation of 100?m Thick Frozen Histological Brain Sections
5 Presentation of the Images for the Three Atlases
B: Axial (Horizontal) Atlas
C: Coronal Atlas
D: Sagittal Atlas
IV Myelo-, Cytoarchitectonic and Connectomic Atlas of the Brain in Stereotaxic (MNI) Space
A: Material and Methods
1 The Brain
2 Methods
3 Earlier Histological, Morphometric and Immunohistochemical Studies
4 Nomenclature
5 Photographic Plates and Corresponding Diagrams
6 Three-Dimensional Reconstructions
7 Standardization
8 Mapping of the Atlas Space to the MNI/ICBM2009b Template
9 Use of the Atlas for the Interpretation of Individual in vivo Brains
10 Mapping of the Cortex Areas
11 Layout of the Myelo- and Cytoarchitectonic Stereotaxic Atlas in MNI Space
B: Coronal Sections and Diagrams
1 Surface Views
2 Surface Maps
3: Plates, Figures and Diagrams
C: Axial (Horizontal) Diagrams
D: Sagittal Diagrams
E: Brainstem
F: Published Studies: Referring to the Brain Represented in the Atlas of the Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates
1 Histological, Morphometric and Histochemical Studies
2 References
A. Previous Editions
B. The Two Components of this Atlas (What is New in the 5th Edition?)
1: Three Atlases of the Brain in the Head
2: Atlas of the Human Brain in Stereotaxic (MNI) Space (AHB)
C. How to Use this Atlas (Layout of the Book)
D. Reproduction of Figures by Users of the Atlas
E. Acknowledgements and Dedication
III Three Atlases of the Brain in the Head
A: Materials and Methods
1 Anatomical Preparations
2 Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
3 Preparation and Photography of the Anatomical Slices
4 Preparation of 100?m Thick Frozen Histological Brain Sections
5 Presentation of the Images for the Three Atlases
B: Axial (Horizontal) Atlas
C: Coronal Atlas
D: Sagittal Atlas
IV Myelo-, Cytoarchitectonic and Connectomic Atlas of the Brain in Stereotaxic (MNI) Space
A: Material and Methods
1 The Brain
2 Methods
3 Earlier Histological, Morphometric and Immunohistochemical Studies
4 Nomenclature
5 Photographic Plates and Corresponding Diagrams
6 Three-Dimensional Reconstructions
7 Standardization
8 Mapping of the Atlas Space to the MNI/ICBM2009b Template
9 Use of the Atlas for the Interpretation of Individual in vivo Brains
10 Mapping of the Cortex Areas
11 Layout of the Myelo- and Cytoarchitectonic Stereotaxic Atlas in MNI Space
B: Coronal Sections and Diagrams
1 Surface Views
2 Surface Maps
3: Plates, Figures and Diagrams
C: Axial (Horizontal) Diagrams
D: Sagittal Diagrams
E: Brainstem
F: Published Studies: Referring to the Brain Represented in the Atlas of the Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates
1 Histological, Morphometric and Histochemical Studies
2 References