We have moved away from the 73730 mesh, we are now using a new method to
generate meshes which results in much more regular node spacing.  Making a
sphere is actually relatively easy, especially with the new release of
caret.  The hard part is making it into an atlas, which I defer to someone
else.  The command:

caret_command -surface-create-spheres

Will generate a pair of matched left/right spheres (mirror node
correspondence, topologies with normals oriented out).  I think that
command made it into the 5.65 release, if not you can use spec file change
resolution, and grab just the new sphere, and ditch the rest.  The odd bit
about spec file change resolution, though, is if you give it an old node
count, like 73730, it will give you the old sphere (this is in case someone
is relying on its old behavior).  However, ask it for 73731 nodes, and you
will get a new highly regular sphere instead (though it won't have 73730
nodes, because the 73730 node mesh wasn't a regularly divided geodesic
sphere, but it will give you something close).  If all else fails, there
are a few spheres in the caret data directory.

Tim

On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 6:56 PM, Tristan Chaplin
<[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi,
>
> A while back I asked about creating standard mesh of 73,730 nodes, similar
> to what is used for PALS atlas.  I never got a chance to follow it up then
> but I'd like to give it a go now.  It seemed at the time that the knowledge
> for creating such meshes was limited to a select few so if anyone has any
> experience with this or has the contact details of someone I would greatly
> appreciate hearing from them.
>
> The reason for creating this mesh is for making atlas for the marmoset
> monkey.  We are very interested registering this atlas to the macaque
> monkey and doing analyses similar to Hill et al. (2010).
>
> Thanks,
> Tristan Chaplin
>
> On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 16:04, Tristan Chaplin 
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Ok thanks for the information.
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Feb 4, 2011 at 03:25, Donna Dierker <[email protected]>wrote:
>>
>>> On 02/01/2011 07:31 PM, Tristan Chaplin wrote:
>>> > Hi,
>>> >
>>> > I've been reading about the creation of your atlases, and I see that
>>> > PALS and the macaque atlases have standard size mesh of 73,730 nodes.
>>> >  I was wondering, is this the same across species to allow
>>> > interspecies registration?  i.e. is it still possible to do
>>> > interspecies comparisons of other species with different size meshes?
>>> Possible, but more difficult.  Not to say that achieving vertex
>>> correspondence across species is trivial.  Interspecies comparisons are
>>> really hard.  I think David Van Essen is the only one in our lab that is
>>> doing them, although Matt Glasser might also be doing some.
>>> >
>>> > I was also wondering how the standard mesh was was actually made.  The
>>> > PALS paper refers to the Saad 2004 paper, which I think uses SUMA.
>>> >  SUMA has a program called MapIcosahedron to create standard meshes.
>>> >  Is this still how you would recommend making a standard mesh?
>>> Tim Coalson (a student who works summers here) also developed a utility
>>> that creates meshes of specified resolution.
>>>
>>> Making a standard mesh is not something I ever do.  You do it with a
>>> specific motivation -- typically some other important data is already
>>> available on that mesh.  And the way you usually get your data on that
>>> mesh is to register it to an atlas target already on that mesh.
>>>
>>> If you are talking about creating, say, a sparser mesh for mice/rats,
>>> then you're out of my orbit.
>>> >
>>> > Thanks,
>>> > Tristan
>>> >
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>> >
>>> > _______________________________________________
>>> > caret-users mailing list
>>> > [email protected]
>>> > http://brainvis.wustl.edu/mailman/listinfo/caret-users
>>> >
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
>>
>>
>
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