Hi Michael,
yes, you can do this in tksurfer with a tcl script (labl_erode and
labl_dilate I believe). Not sure if there is a binary to do it, but it
would be pretty easy to write
Bruce
On Mon, 16 Jul 2012, Michael Waskom wrote:
Hmm, ok. Are there no functions for doing a dilation/erosion
Hmm, ok. Are there no functions for doing a dilation/erosion on a surface
label?
On Mon, Jul 16, 2012 at 1:14 PM, Douglas N Greve
wrote:
> There is not an easy/good way to handle this situation. The way it works
> is that it goes through each point in the source and finds the closest
> vertex in
There is not an easy/good way to handle this situation. The way it works
is that it goes through each point in the source and finds the closest
vertex in the target. If the target is more densely sampled, then there
are some points in the target in the middle of the label that are not
the close
Hi, just wanted to bump this up since it looks like Doug is back.
On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 5:09 PM, Michael Waskom wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using mri_label2label to reverse normalize labels from fsaverage
> space to the native surface.
>
> I'm ending up with some splotchy-looking labels, for lack of a
Hi,
I'm using mri_label2label to reverse normalize labels from fsaverage
space to the native surface.
I'm ending up with some splotchy-looking labels, for lack of a better
word. See what I mean here:
http://web.mit.edu/mwaskom/www/splotchy.png
I'm doing this normalization in a script with the f