Thanks,

stephane


> 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
>>
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