Hi Dr. Morris,
I'm not sure if they make available the original 128 brains from the
MNI, but that one would be an interesting one to look at...
But, more pertinent for your question - you should be able to get a ton
of data from the fMRIDC website - I'm just checking it out now after
hearing about it years ago and having my memory jogged by your question.
http://www.fmridc.org/f/fmridc/index.html
Anyway, I hope that helps - best wishes,
--
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------------------------
Daniel A. Fitzgerald
Ph.D student
Radboud University Nijmegen
Behavioral Science Institute &
FC Donders Center for Cognitive Neuroimaging
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On Fri, 2008-02-08 at 14:57 +0000, Jeffrey Morris wrote:
> Hello, I am Jeffrey Morris, a Biostatistics faculty member at MD Anderson
> Cancer Center in Houston, TX. I am interested in getting more familiar
> with fMRI data, and "playing around" with some good data sets to
> familiarize myself with the data.
>
> Do you know of any publically available data sets that I could use for
> this purpose? I would specifically like to find data that have already
> been aligned with a standard "brain", but that has not been smoothed or
> normalized in other ways. I am interested in simple data (e.g. looking at
> the effect of just one simple stimulus), as well as more complex data
> (with perhaps multiple factors being studied simultaneously.
>
> Thank you, and I look forward to learning from this message board!
>
> Jeff
>
> Jeffrey S. Morris, PhD
> Associate Professor
> Department of Biostatistics
> The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
> 1515 Holcombe Boulevard, Unit 447
> Houston, TX 77030-4009
> Phone: 713-563-4284
> Fax: 713-463-4242
> [log in to unmask]
> http://biostatistics.mdanderson.org/Morris
> Associate Editor, JRSS-B, Biometrics, The Annals of Applied Statistics
>
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