External Email - Use Caution        

Hi Maedeh,

The human cerebral cortex is a highly folded sheet of neurons the thickness of which varies between 1 and 4.5 mm, with an overall average of approximately 2.5 mm (1–3). Regional variations in the cortical thickness can be quite large. For example, Brodmann’s area 3 on the posterior bank of the central sulcus is among the thinnest of cortical regions, with an average thickness of less than 2 mm, whereas Brodmann’s area 4 on the anterior bank is one of the thickest regions, frequently exceeding 4 mm. Interestingly, the distribution of the thickness is not uniform by layer, nor is the variation in the thickness of the cortical layers proportional to the variation in the total thickness.

Regards,
Bellamy

Specialist - iWYZE
Office: 75 Helen Joseph Street, JHB
Web: https://www.iwyze.co.za | https://www.iwyze.co.za/products/car-insurance  



On Sat, Sep 1, 2018 at 5:37 PM Bruce Fischl <fischl@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu> wrote:
Hi Maedeh

we do compute volume/thickness/surface area etc... and tabulate them by
parcel in files in the stats subdir (e.g. aparc.stats). I'm not sure what
you mean by the second part of your question. How would this define the
edge in the brain network?

cheers
Bruce


On Sat, 1 Sep 2018,
Maedeh Khalilian wrote:

>
>         External Email - Use Caution        
>
> Dear Freesurfer Experts;
> I have a question, are there any ways in FreeSurfer to estimate the gray matter volume or cortical
> thickness of each region after parcellation, in order to define the edges in the brain network?
> Kind regards,
> Maedeh,
>
>_______________________________________________



--
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------