I'm not sure what will happen. Safest to just recreate it:
cd subject/mri mri_watershed T1.mgz brainmask.auto.mgz
dasoscia@buffalo.edu wrote:
Alright I converted the COR files to mgz fine, and saved the volume as brainmask.mgz. All looks good. But before I run -autorecon2, am I going to run into problems because I only have a brainmask.mgz and not a brainmask.auto.mgz? (I deleted the old brainmask.auto.mgz because it was the old volumes before I corrected them manually). I just want to make sure I am good to run -autorecon2 before I go ahead and begin it.
Quoting Bruce Fischl fischl@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu:
but you'll need to convert the COR file you saved to brainmask.mgz if you want to recover your edits (4 hours of manual editing!).
Bruce
On Wed, 28 Jun 2006, Nick Schmansky wrote:
The brainmask.mgz file is the one that should be edited (and
saved), so
select that filename to save. Then just continue with autorecon2
(and
it will use your brainmask.mgz). It will not overwrite your brainmask.mgz unless you specify the aptly named '-clean-bm' flag
to
recon-all.
On Wed, 2006-06-28 at 15:00 -0400, dasoscia@buffalo.edu wrote:
I just finished my 4 hour manual editing...went to file>save
volume
as...then saved it to where it defaulted me, which was the mri
folder of
this subject. When i pull up my brainmask, it is giving me the
same one
that it had before i made any changes. I hope i didnt do
something
wrong and lost all the edits. There is 256 COR files though now
in my
mri folder for this subject I noticed. Maybe these are the
edited
slices? Just let me know how to get my final brainmask and how
to
proceed with running -autorecon2 on it properly. Thanks.
Quoting Bruce Fischl fischl@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu:
it helps detect cases in which the deformation is too big (e.g.
when
the surface deforms all the way into the cerebellum), and can thus recover from e.g. cerebellum chopping.
On Wed, 28 Jun 2006 dasoscia@buffalo.edu wrote:
I am currently in the process of manual editing...just curious
though,
what exatly does adding an atlas do to the skullstrip process?
Quoting Nick Schmansky nicks@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu:
>First have a look at the troubleshooting wiki pages at: > > > >
https://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/fswiki/FsTutorial/TroubleshootingData
>In particular, Subject 1 has a skull strip problem, and the > >
fix
info
>is >here: > > > >
https://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/fswiki/FsTutorial/SkullStripFix
>I'm guessing you have seen this page since you have already >attempted >one type of fix (adjusting the watershed parameters). The >alternative >fix is the slice-by-slice manual editing. > >You could also try adding the wsatlas flag: > > recon-all -s (subject) -skullstrip -wsatlas > >which will use an atlas to help with the skull-strip. > >Does the contrast of your image look good? That is, comparing > >
your
>orig.mgz to that of the sample subject 'bert' included with >freesurfer? > >Nick > > >On Wed, 2006-06-28 at 10:09 -0400, dasoscia@buffalo.edu wrote: > > >>I am having trouble with one of my skull strips, and getting >> >>
very
>>extreme results. When I re-run the skullstrip using >> >>
different
>watershed > > >>values, anything at 56% or below takes 75%+ of the brain out, >> >>
and
>as > > >>soon as I jump to 57% or higher, it leaves on almost all of >> >>
the
>skull, > > >>except for maybe 5% of it. Is this indicative of a more >> >> >complicated > > >>problem, and what is my next step (other than manually taking >> >>
off
>the > > >>skull), if any? >>Thanks >>_______________________________________________ >>Freesurfer mailing list >>Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu >>https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer >> >> >> >> > > > _______________________________________________ Freesurfer mailing list Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer
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