I can speak of higher resolution images for recon processing.

Currently, "recon-all" script can take the option of "-cm" (conform to min voxel size).
This may end up creating more slices than 256, but freesurfer should be able to handle
as long as there are enough memory left. Make sure that you have 2 Gbyte of
memory and 2 GByte of swap space. Here, we are approaching the 32 bit memory
address limit. If you run out of memory, try reducing the number of slices.
Freesurfer "recon" routines should be able to handle slices different from 256.
(Exception: tkregister2 cannot handle more than 256 slices. I "cannot" speak for fsfast.)


Make sure that the direction cosines for animal brains match those of the human,
i.e. x_(r,a,s), y_(r,a,s), z_(r,a,s), c_(r,a,s) are correct in the human brain sense.
You may have to hand edit these values.


Too many freesurfer routines "assume" the uniform voxel sizes and thus the volume
must be conformed to uniform voxel sizes.


You may see freesurfer routines fail on the high resolution images because of the highly
grainy nature of the high resolution images. Therefore, you may have to run each routine
by hand with additional options.


You may try "cheating" freesurfer routines by changing the voxel size to be 1 mm, even though
the actual size is less than 1mm (i.e. editing orig/COR-.info information).


Tosa

Yasunari Tosa, Ph.D.
R&D Engineer                                email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mass. General Hospital NMR Center       phone:                  
Building 149
13th Street                             fax  :
Charlestown, MA 02129




Geoffrey Aguirre wrote:


Free surfers --

I am collecting data from dogs. Any advice regarding passing this data through the system? I have a couple of specific questions:

1) Should I acquire data with voxel sizes smaller than 1mm, given that the brain is much smaller? How would I tell free-surfer to operate with this higher resolution data?

2) So far, automated skull stripping has been a failure, even with definition of a "seed point" in the white matter. The routine strips away the brain around the seed point, leaving a large chunk of scalp and muscle with a bit of cortex attached. Any thoughts on how to get this going?

Thanks in advance for any help,

Geoff

--

Geoffrey Karl Aguirre, M.D., Ph.D.
University of Pennsylvania      Center for Cognitive Neuroscience
3815 Walnut Street              Fax: (215) 898-1982
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6196     mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://ccn.upenn.edu/~aguirre

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