Hi
We've had some trouble with displaying the Freesurfer graphics correctly on some new stationary Dell PCs recently. I now need a new laptop, and I'm considering buying a Dell Latitude X300. I won't use it as an analysis machine, mostly just for travel, but I need to be able to display images and work with Freesurfer on it. Most features on this light-weight model are integrated so that they can't be changed, including the graphics card (855GM integrated graphics shipset - up to 64MB), so I was wondering if any of you have any expericence with running Freesurfer on this model, and if so, does it work OK?
I'd be grateful for any comments.
Thanks,
Kristine
Dear all-
Today when I played average7, I found that labels (e.g. lh-avg_calcarine_sulcus.label) in the label folder of average7 were not properly displayed in the surface of average7 (e.g. the label for calcarine sulcus was put somewhere in the middle temporal cortex). Could anyone help me address this puzzle? I am using the newest version available from freesurfer download site. Thanks for your guidance!
Best,
Jia Liu
Hi Jia,
not sure why that's happening for you. I just loaded lh-avg_calcarine_sulcus.label on the lh.inflated surface of average7 and it was fine. Still, we make no claims about those labels, so you are better off drawing your own if you are having troubles (it only takes a couple of minutes), or use the parcellation in the ?h.atlas2002_simple.annot file.
cheers, Bruce
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005, Jia Liu wrote:
Dear all-
Today when I played average7, I found that labels (e.g. lh-avg_calcarine_sulcus.label) in the label folder of average7 were not properly displayed in the surface of average7 (e.g. the label for calcarine sulcus was put somewhere in the middle temporal cortex). Could anyone help me address this puzzle? I am using the newest version available from freesurfer download site. Thanks for your guidance!
Best,
Jia Liu
Freesurfer mailing list Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer
freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu