It has become increasingly clear that the neurons in the cerebral cortex are not randomly interconnected. This wiring specificity can result from synapse formation mechanisms that interconnect neurons depending on their activity or genetically defined identity. Here we report that in addition to these synapse formation mechanisms, the structural composition of the neuropil provides a third prominent source by which wiring specificity emerges in cortical networks. This structurally determined wiring specificity reflects the packing density, morphological diversity and similarity of the dendritic and axonal processes. The higher these three factors are, the more recurrent the topology of the networks. Conversely, low density, diversity and similarity yield feedforward networks. These principles predict connectivity patterns from subcellular to network scales that are remarkably consistent with empirical observations from a rich body of literature. Thus, cortical network architectures reflect the specific morphological properties of their constituents to much larger degrees than previously thought.
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