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 > ===================== > This e-mail contains CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION which may contain PROTECTED > HEALTHCARE INFORMATION and may also be LEGALLY PRIVILEGED and which is > intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above. If the > reader of the e-mail is not the intended recipient or the employee or agent > responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby > notified that you are in possession of confidential and privileged > information. Any unauthorized use, disclosure, copying or the taking of any > action in reliance on the contents of this information is strictly > prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this e-mail > unintentionally, please immediately notify the sender via telephone at > (773) > 406-2464 or email. > > > On Sat, Jun 14, 2014 at 7:16 PM, ζ¨ζδΈη <[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 >>> >>> >> >