Background: Recent methodological advances in the study of the cerebral white matter have left short association fibers relatively underexplored due to their compact and juxtacortical nature, which represent significant challenges for both post-mortem post-cortex removal dissection and magnetic resonance-based diffusion imaging. Objective: To introduce a novel inside-out post-mortem fiber dissection technique to assess short association fiber anatomy. Methods: Six cerebral specimens were obtained from a body donation program and underwent fixation in formalin. Following two freezing and thawing cycles, a standardized protocol involving peeling fibers from deep structures towards the cortex was developed. Results: The inside-out technique effectively exposed the superficial white matter. The procedure revealed distinguishable intergyral fibers, demonstrating their dissectability and enabling the identification of their orientation. The assessment of layer thickness was possible through direct observation and ex vivo morphological magnetic resonance imaging. Conclusion: The inside-out fiber technique effectively demonstrates intergyral association fibers in the post-mortem human brain. It adds to the neuroscience armamentarium, overcoming methodological obstacles and offering an anatomical substrate essential for neural circuit modeling and the evaluation of neuroimaging congruence. Impact statement The inside-out fiber dissection technique enables a totally new perception of cerebral connectivity as the observer navigates inside the parenchyma and looks toward the cerebral surface with the subcortical white matter and the cortical mantle in place. This approach has proven very effective for exposing intergyral association fibers, which have shown to be much more distinguishable from an inner perspective. It gave rise to unprecedented images of the human superficial white matter and allowed, for the first time, direct observation of this vast mantle of fascicles on entire cerebral hemisphere aspects.
Keywords: brain mapping; cerebral cortex; connectivity; connectome; neuroanatomy; superficial white matter; u-fibers; white matter.