Hi Jennifer,

thank you for your speedy answer.:-)

Unfortunately I didn't understand all of it. The problems with the  
skullstrip did not (!) affect any of the surfaces in this case and no  
grey or white matter was cut out. What I was interested in is whether  
any other measures might be affected (except for the dura volume which  
I am not interested in). Especially whether it affects any of the  
volume-based analysis?

To put it in a nutshell: Would you rerun the skullstrip with different  
watershed-parameters so as to prevent the skullstrip to be overly  
aggressive and "bite" these chunks out of the dura? Or would you leave  
it like it is?

Thanks again!

Best,

Paul

Quoting "Kriegel, Jennifer Lynn Sarai" <jlk130...@utdallas.edu>:

> Hi Paul,
>
>> From my understanding, that's the stuff that can interfere with  
>> your surfaces. I've run g-cut skullstrip on volumes where the  
>> surface of the pial is seen as the white matter, and the dura is  
>> seen as the cortical/pial surface. I think in terms of cortical  
>> measures, such as cortical thickness, you're better off having run  
>> the stripping. I could be wrong, but unless you're interested  
>> specifically in the dura volume as well, it's not going to affect  
>> your brain volume measure.
>
> Best regards,
> Jennifer Kriegel
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: freesurfer-boun...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu  
> [mailto:freesurfer-boun...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu] On Behalf Of Paul  
> Schauer
> Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2015 7:03 AM
> To: freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
> Subject: [Freesurfer] Skullstrip problems
>
> Hi all,
>
> I ran the normal recon-all -i... -s... -all on a couple of subjects  
> and I realized that the skullstrip often seems to "bite" a chunk out  
> of the meninges (see attached screenshot). Whilst the wm- and  
> pial-surfaces seem unaffected and no grey or white matter seems to  
> be missing I didn't bother too much. But I was asking myself whether  
> these missing chunks did not indirectly affect these measures? Or  
> any other measures such as the whole brain volume?
>
> Any help would be greatly appreciated!
>
> Best,
>
> Paul
>
> --
>
> Paul Schauer, M.Sc. Psychologie
> Biological Psychology & Neuropsychology
> Faculty of Psychology & Human Movement Science | University of  
> Hamburg Von-Melle-Park 11 | Room 204 | 20146 Hamburg, Germany
> +49 (0)40 42838  4573
>
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--

Paul Schauer, M.Sc. Psychologie
Biological Psychology & Neuropsychology
Faculty of Psychology & Human Movement Science | University of Hamburg
Von-Melle-Park 11 | Room 204 | 20146 Hamburg, Germany
+49 (0)40 42838  4573

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