You should run the specific command that generates the .rot. file in
PostFreeSurfer to get that file. Starting with FreeSurfer for MSMAll is
definitely not recommended as that will make the problem harder for MSMAll
(having to try to undo the bad FreeSurfer distortions), and it might be better
Sorry, no.
--
Michael Harms, Ph.D.
---
Associate Professor of Psychiatry
Washington University School of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry, Box 8134
660 South Euclid Ave.Tel: 314-747-6173
St. Louis, MO 63110
Dear all,
Is there any pre computed FIRST & FAST data for the HCP releases?
Regards,
Claude
There is no threshold for correlation values which says they are
insignificant or "mathematically irrelevant", only statistical tests can
tell you if something is unlikely to be due to chance. The fact that a
small r-value is statistically significant just means that the r-values if
there was no
Thank you Matthew. To be more accurate, my question is about the expected
r-values indicating an existing connectivity between brainstem ROI to the
cortical areas. I have not seen many articles reporting the values of the
significant correlation coefficients and so I am wondering why it is not
Hello,
When I run msm within MSMAll I get a core dump because the* --inmesh file
could not be found:
${NativeFolder}/${Subject}.${Hemisphere}.sphere.rot.native.surf.gii*. I see
that the file is generated within the PostFreeSurfer pipeline if the
MSMSulc registration is specified. I've already run