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You can use the same mask at the same time as a (i) classif target, (ii) inclusing mask (--waypoints) or (iii) stopping mask (--stop).

(i) and (iii) won't exclude the paths that do not reach the mask, but (ii) will.

Cheers,
Saad.

On 30 Aug 2008, at 02:54, Matt Glasser wrote:

Hi Longchuan,
 
Using a target mask will cause samples to be rejected that do not end up reaching the target, and the waytotal text file lists the total number of streamlines that reached the target.   
 
Peace,

Matt.
 

From: FSL - FMRIB's Software Library [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Longchuan Li
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 4:16 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [FSL] Visualize tracts that only reached the cortical target masks
 
Hi, Matt
 
thanks for the information.
 
If I use the cortical mask as both the stop and target mask, It is true that the these tracts that reached the cortical masks will stop . But the tracts that did not reach the cortical mask, such as the frontopontine tracts reaching the frontal lobe, will still be there.
 
Are you talking about the waytotal or waypoint? If it is waytotal, I think it counts the total tract numbers that are not rejected by one of the three criteria (saw from the previous posts, exclusion masks, looping tracks, etc..), but not the total tract numbers that connected my seed mask and classification target masks.
 
I am looking forward to hearing more information
 
thanks
 
Longchuan 
 
1)      If you want tracts to stop at your cortical mask, you should use it as both the target and a stop mask.  The waypoint mask you describe is probably unnecessary. If you want, you can track symmetrically by treating each mask as a seed and a target/stop mask, and then adding the results together.
2)       
3)        
4)       It seems that the most straightforward way to measure this is to just use the number in the waypoints file (the number of samples that went from seed to target).
----- Original Message -----
From: [log in to unmask]" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; ">Matt Glasser
To: [log in to unmask]" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; ">[log in to unmask]
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 4:19 PM
Subject: Re: [FSL] Visualize tracts that only reached the cortical target masks
 
Hi Longchuan,
 
5) If you want tracts to stop at your cortical mask, you should use it as both the target and a stop mask.  The waypoint mask you describe is probably unnecessary. If you want, you can track symmetrically by treating each mask as a seed and a target/stop mask, and then adding the results together.
6) It seems that the most straightforward way to measure this is to just use the number in the waypoints file (the number of samples that went from seed to target).
 
Peace,
 
Matt.
 

From: FSL - FMRIB's Software Library [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Longchuan Li
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 2:27 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [FSL] Visualize tracts that only reached the cortical target masks
 
Dear FSL users
 
I am looking at the corticospinal tracts from midbrain to precentral gyri. What I did were as follows: I first drew a seed mask at the cross section of corticospinal tracts at the level of pons. Then, I drew cortical masks at the precentral gyri. There is also a waypoint mask at the posterior part of internal capsules between these two masks.
 
 My questions are:
 
1) How can I visualize the tracts that *only* reached the precentral gyri cortical masks? I was trying to use the cortical masks as the waypoint masks as well as target masks but only found some of the tracts were passing though them, not showing what I want to see. I am also thinking to use the cortical masks as the seed mask and use the corticospinal mask (original seed mask) as the target mask to track the tracts. But I think I need advice from experts before I do them in batch.  
 
2) Is the total number saved in "seed_to_mycorticalmasks.nii.gz"  (extracted by using the mean of the total * number of voxels) a good way to quantify the strength of the paths between my seed mask and cortical target masks?
 
Thank you
 
 
Longchuan Li

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Saad Jbabdi, 
Postdoctoral Research Assistant,  
Oxford University FMRIB Centre

FMRIB, JR Hospital, Headington, Oxford  OX3 9DU, UK
+44 (0) 1865 222545  (fax 222717)
[log in to unmask]    http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/~saad
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