Assuming the results of -subcortseg should be corrected for whole brain volume (for group comparison or use as covariate), what number should be used: ICV, BrainSegVol, total number of voxels? Should it be obtained from an image file (e.g., aseg.mgz) or stats (e.g., aseg.stats) file?
Thank-you,
Julie
Julie E. McEntee, MA, CCRP Senior Research Program Coordinator Department of Psychiatry- Neuroimaging Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 600 N. Wolfe St./Phipps 300 Baltimore, MD 21287 Phone: 410-502-0468 Fax: 410-614-3676
On 12/15/09 12:49 PM, "Douglas N Greve" greve@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
aseg.stats is created by counting the number of voxels in the aseg.mgz. Actually, it includes partial volume correction, so it won't be exactly the same as the voxel count. The ICV is an estimate only based on the talairach transform. It's hard to say why two subjects would have the same ICV. Maybe they have the same ICV or it might be an artifact of the transform. Try checking the transforms on both of them to make sure they are accurate.
doug
Rebecca Dautoff wrote:
Hi all I am relatively unfamiliar with the structural side of analysis and am curious about how aseg.stats is created during recon. I have 2 subjects with the same ICV but volumes for other structures are different. What are the chances that this is just a coincidence and not an issue with the data? Assuming there is a mistake, how is it possible for there to be a mistake with ICV but not other structures?
Thanks, Becca _______________________________________________ Freesurfer mailing list Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer