Hi Stephane, How many studies do you have?
One thing that comes to mind is to use an atlas paint file. I'm not used to doing this, so forgive me if this is sketchy/wrong, but I'll try: You load the paint files for all studies, and then save the resulting multi-column paint file as BrodmannMulti-Study.atlas.paint. Make sure there are no extra columns, like the lobes, medial wall, etc. Just one Brodmann column for each study. Then use File: Open Data File: atlas paint and open the file you just saved as an atlas paint, rather than a paint file. See Caret Sept 2006 tutorial, page 18, figure 1.13 for an example applied to sulcal ID: http://brainvis.wustl.edu/wiki_linked_files/documentation/Caret_Tutorial_Sep22.pdf You can use borders in conjunction with paint, but things get messy once you try to view more than one paint file concurrently. Donna On 12/02/2009 01:25 PM, [email protected] wrote: > Dear Caret users, > > I am looking for a way to summarize the information from multiple studies > reporting Brodmann areas. > > I have summarized the relevant studies by creating a paint file for each, > using the function Surface -> Region of Interest Operations. > > To look at them, the d/c window only allow for 3 overlays. > > Any thoughts to get around this? > > Thanks > > Stephane > > _______________________________________________ > caret-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://brainvis.wustl.edu/mailman/listinfo/caret-users > _______________________________________________ caret-users mailing list [email protected] http://brainvis.wustl.edu/mailman/listinfo/caret-users
