Dear Tracy,

It is true that we haven’t validated our software on such a young population, 
but I believe that, at age four, the appearance of the brain is close enough to 
that of adults for automated techniques do a good job (e.g., FreeSurfer has 
been used on children scans in many studies). Having said that, QCing a bunch 
of cases would be appropriate. Tracing the subfields in vivo with our ex vivo 
protocol to enable direct comparison (e.g., Dice scores) is nearly impossible, 
but a visual assessment of whether the segmentation follows the anatomy should 
be sufficient.

Kind regards,

/Eugenio


Juan Eugenio Iglesias
ERC Senior Research Fellow
Translational Imaging Group
University College London
http://www.jeiglesias.com
http://cmictig.cs.ucl.ac.uk/


On 9 Jan 2017, at 20:03, Tracy Riggins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Dr. Inglesias

I am a developmental psychologist studying memory and brain development in 
early childhood at the University of Maryland. My lab has acquired whole-brain 
standard resolution T1-weighted scans and ultra-high resolution T2-weighted 
scans from 125 child participants aged 4-8 years.  We are using your automatic 
segmentation for hippocampal subregions to obtain volumes for assessment in our 
study.

As we write up the results for publication, I began to wonder if reviewers will 
ask for verification that the automatic segmentation is valid for our young age 
group. I know you tested Alzheimer's and an elderly sample in your paper, so I 
suspect it is valid for a variety of populations. But I am writing to inquire 
your thoughts on this issue.  Do you think verification is needed?  If so, 
would you suggest we hand trace a subset of our data to verify the automatic 
methods?  I would appreciate any advise as to how to best approach this.

Thank you, in advance, for your consideration of my inquiry.

Sincerely,
Tracy


Tracy Riggins, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
University of Maryland

_______________________________________________
Freesurfer mailing list
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer


The information in this e-mail is intended only for the person to whom it is
addressed. If you believe this e-mail was sent to you in error and the e-mail
contains patient information, please contact the Partners Compliance HelpLine at
http://www.partners.org/complianceline . If the e-mail was sent to you in error
but does not contain patient information, please contact the sender and properly
dispose of the e-mail.

_______________________________________________
Freesurfer mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer


The information in this e-mail is intended only for the person to whom it is
addressed. If you believe this e-mail was sent to you in error and the e-mail
contains patient information, please contact the Partners Compliance HelpLine at
http://www.partners.org/complianceline . If the e-mail was sent to you in error
but does not contain patient information, please contact the sender and properly
dispose of the e-mail.

Reply via email to