I'm not 100% sure that I am answering your question. But, I will give
it a go.
In one of my studies, I ran three sets of the same kind experimental
stimuli (3 sessions x 28 events each=84 total events) for each of my 18
subjects (6 per group, 3 groups).
To analyze this data, I used a three level analysis:
First, I used Feat to analyze the session data (28 events per session),
for each session for each subject (3 x 18 = 54 analyses).
Second, I used Feat to analyze the subject data (3 sessions each).
Third, I used Feat to analyze the group data.
Hope that helps.
Darren
On Mar 19, 2004, at 10:16 AM, Brad Goodyear wrote:
> What do people typically do with two repeated datasets if not merge
> them?
> Average them, or treat them as separate runs in some sort of multi-run
> analysis?
>
> -Brad
>
> On Mar 18, 2004, at 9:06 PM, Jack Grinband wrote:
>
>> Hi Conny,
>> You can use avwmerge to concatenate across time, but it's generally
>> discouraged.
>> See
>> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wa.exe?A2=ind0306&L=fsl&P=R6034&I=-1
>> for
>> some of the problems with concatenation.
>> cheers,
>>
>> jack
>>
>> On Thu, 18 Mar 2004 20:04:05 +0100, Conny Schmidt <
>> [log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>>> Dear FSL community,
>>>
>>> is there an option in FEAT to concatenate fMRI runs to one run and to
>>> perform
>>> analysis over that single run?
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>> Conny
>
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