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Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. FAQ

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Introduction

This tool allows you to combine a background image (raw FMRI or high resolution MRI) image with one or two statistics images. The statistics image(s) must be in registration with the background image.

The different programs are:

Renderstats GUI

Select all of the images, and then enter a threshold (Min) for the stats image(s). Any stats values below this will not appear in the colour rendered output. Any stats above Max will appear, all with the same colour as the Max value gets (ie yellow or light blue). You don't need to change the "Min" and "Max" settings unless you want to vary the display range - for example if the background image looks very dark when scaled to its min and max.

The colourmap type option lets you choose Solid colours (you don't see any sign of the background images within the colour blobs) or Transparent colours (you will see through the colour blobs to the background intensity).

In general the intensity values within colour rendered images bear no simple relationship to the original stats values. However, in the case of rendering Solid colours with Floating point output type, the red-yellow blobs will contain the actual values of the stats input image (but the blue blobs will not).

If you want to do 3D rendering in MEDx with the results of stats colour rendering, you should use solid colours and choose Integer output type. Then in the 3D rendering GUI either select Material Iso-Surface for solid 3D rendering or Transparent Summation for transparent rendering - the latter option means that activations just under the cortical surface will be visible. The images may appear quite dark - in this case you can always brighten them (after "printing" them to tiff files) using the program "display".

Slicer

Standard 2D picture display programs cannot read 3D / 4D NIFTI/Analyze images. Thus FSL includes SLICER, a set of utilities which take 3D images and produce 2D pictures of slices from within these files. These slices can be of axial, coronal or sagittal orientation. If two input images are specified (instead of just one), the first image is used as normal, but overlaid in red on top of this are image edges derived from the second input image. This can be useful for checking the results of registration.

The NIFTI and Analyze formats do not allow for colour image information to be stored. However, an unused part of the image header is used by some FSL programs to store information about suitable colour maps for use with certain images. For example, the colour activation images produced by FEAT contain such information. The programs in SLICER use this to use the right colour map when producing slice pictures.

The different SLICER programs are:


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2012-09-05 11:30