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Dear Donald,

 Thanks for your answer! Actually, now I'm having a little weird result,
and that may resolve the problem. I'll try.

Best,
Ikko


2014-06-17 2:08 GMT+09:00 MCLAREN, Donald <[log in to unmask]>:

> If you are doing DTI, then you will want to switch to a white matter
> atlas, rather than a cortical atlas like AAL.
>
> Best Regards, Donald McLaren
> =================
> D.G. McLaren, Ph.D.
> Research Fellow, Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital
> and
> Harvard Medical School
> Postdoctoral Research Fellow, GRECC, Bedford VA
> Website: http://www.martinos.org/~mclaren
> Office: (773) 406-2464
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> On Sat, Jun 14, 2014 at 7:16 PM, ζœ¨ζ‘δΈ€ηš“ <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>> Hi Helmut,
>>
>>  Thanks for you reply! Actually, I'm now doing some resaerch for
>> diffusion-MRI, and just thought that changing percellation would chnage the
>> result, though I know that many would do this by AAL.
>> Do these all you mentioned have "Labels," "Template," and "Labels
>> names," because all I need to have is these datas?
>> (I think these would, but I just would like to make it sure..)
>>
>> Best,
>> Ikko
>>
>>
>>
>> 2014-06-14 21:54 GMT+09:00 Helmut Nebl <
>> [log in to unmask]>:
>>
>> Dear Ikko,
>>>
>>>
>>> which regions are you interested in? There are several brain atlases
>>> around, but I'm not sure whether this is what you're looking for, as the
>>> number of labels is typically limited:
>>>
>>> - n30r83
>>> http://biomedic.doc.ic.ac.uk/brain-development/index.php?n=Main.AdultMaxProb
>>> (probabilistic brain atlas for anatomical structures)
>>> - LPBA40 http://loni.usc.edu/atlases/Atlas_Detail.php?atlas_id=12
>>> (probabilistic brain atlas for anatomical structures)
>>> - Anatomy toolbox
>>> http://www.fz-juelich.de/inm/inm-1/DE/Forschung/_docs/SPMAnatomyToolbox/SPMAnatomyToolbox_node.html
>>> (probabilistic cytoarchitectonic labels derived from post-mortem brains)
>>> - SUIT for cerebellum and brainstem
>>> http://www.icn.ucl.ac.uk/motorcontrol/imaging/suit.htm
>>> - ICBM probabilistic atlases
>>> http://www.bmap.ucla.edu/portfolio/atlases/ICBM_Probabilistic_Atlases/
>>>
>>> You could also try the WFU PickAtlas toolbox which provides labels for
>>> Brodmann areas (although this gives you a lot of labels, it might not be
>>> the best idea, as it's based on the Talairach brain atlas = a single
>>> post-mortem brain).
>>>
>>>
>>> Best,
>>>
>>> Helmut
>>>
>>>
>>
>