Dear Jeffrey,
We played around with asymmetric spin echo for a couple of years and
decided it was best to just use thin slices with a short TE (40-50ms at
1.5t). I think you will get the same response from the physicists on the
list.
Best regards,
Kent
-------------------------------------------------
Kent A. Kiehl, Ph.D.
Director - Clinical Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory
Institute of Living/Hartford Hospital
Assistant Clinical Professor
Department of Psychiatry
Yale University School of Medicine
Mailing address and contact information:
Institute of Living
200 Retreat Avenue - Fuller 1 Building
Clinical Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory
Hartford, CT USA 06106
Tel: 860-545-7385; Fax: 860-545-7510
Email [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jeffrey P Lorberbaum" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 3:50 AM
Subject: asymmspinecho-again
> Dear group
>
> Does anyone have any ideas on the below e-mail I posted a couple of days
> ago? Any thoughts would be appreciated.
> Thanks
> Jeff
>
> Jeffrey Lorberbaum, MD
> Assitant Professor fo Psychiatry
> Medical University of South Carolina
> Charleston, SC 29425
>
> On Tue, 28 Aug 2001, Jeffrey P Lorberbaum wrote:
>
> > Dear group
> >
> > I was wondering if anyone could tell me the pros and cons of their
> > experiences with using asymmetric spin echo sequence on a 1.5 Tesla
> > scanner for BOLD-fMRI experiments with the amygdala
> > and/or orbitfrontal cortex as regions of interest?
> >
> > Thanks alot
> > Jeff
> >
> > Jeffrey Lorberbaum, MD
> > Assitant Professor fo Psychiatry
> > Medical University of South Carolina
> > Charleston, SC 29425
> >
> >
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