Interhemispheric connections were studied by injecting a mixture of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and wheatgerm agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) into multiple sites in dorsolateral occipital and parietal cortex of one cerebral hemisphere of three galagos (Galago crassicaudatus) and two owl monkeys (Aotus trivirgatus) within seven days of birth. Cortex was either separated from the rest of the brain, flattened and cut parallel to the surface to aid reconstructing surface-view patterns of labeled neurons and processes, or cut in standard coronal or parasagittal planes to better reveal laminar patterns of connections. In both primate species, the surface-view pattern of callosal connections in infants was remarkably adult-like. In infant owl monkeys, callosal connections were concentrated along the margin of area 18 with area 17, and only a few labeled cells were found within area 17. Other visual areas including the second visual area, V-II, and the middle temporal visual area, MT, had patchy distributions of labeled neurons that extended over large parts of the visual field representations. Primary motor, auditory, and somatosensory fields also had patchy distributions of labeled neurons, with regions of areas 3b and adjoining somatosensory fields having few callosal connections in portions that appeared to correspond with representations of the hand and foot. Results were very similar in galagos, except that newborn galagos, as in adults, had a patchy distribution of callosally projecting neurons that extended well within area 17. Furthermore, the labeled neurons were concentrated in patches that aligned with the cytochrome oxidase blobs of area 17. Finally, callosal connections were concentrated in cytochrome oxidase poor regions of area 3b.