Hi, I've encountered a recon-all'ed scan in which the pial surface along the posterior midline "jumps" on cortex in the opposite hemisphere. Is there a simple fix for this, perhaps using a hemisphere mask?
Thanks, Jason
Hi Jason, If the hemi masks look peculiar in the filled.mgz then you can try seed points for the corpus callosum. See this page for details, go to section titled "seed points, fill and cut".
https://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/fswiki/Edits
-Louis
On Thu, 18 Jul 2013, Jason Tourville wrote:
Hi,I've encountered a recon-all'ed scan in which the pial surface along the posterior midline "jumps" on cortex in the opposite hemisphere. Is there a simple fix for this, perhaps using a hemisphere mask?
Thanks, Jason
-- Jason A. Tourville, Ph.D. Research Assistant Professor Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Boston University 677 Beacon St. Boston, MA 02215 Phone: (617)353-9484 Fax: (617)353-7755
Hi Jason
does the aseg get the hemispheres right? Is the cc properly labeled?
cheers Bruce On Thu, 18 Jul 2013, Louis Nicholas Vinke wrote:
Hi Jason, If the hemi masks look peculiar in the filled.mgz then you can try seed points for the corpus callosum. See this page for details, go to section titled "seed points, fill and cut".
https://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/fswiki/Edits
-Louis
On Thu, 18 Jul 2013, Jason Tourville wrote:
Hi,I've encountered a recon-all'ed scan in which the pial surface along the posterior midline "jumps" on cortex in the opposite hemisphere. Is there a simple fix for this, perhaps using a hemisphere mask?
Thanks, Jason
-- Jason A. Tourville, Ph.D. Research Assistant Professor Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Boston University 677 Beacon St. Boston, MA 02215 Phone: (617)353-9484 Fax: (617)353-7755
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