Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-10-01 Thread Shannon Kogachi
Hi Martin,
 I am a little confused about these mapped files in the base directories
you are referring to. How would I check them?

-Shannon K.

On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 4:08 PM, Martin Reuter
mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.eduwrote:

 I see,
 Usually people look at thickness maps and volume on an ROI basis. Volume
 on the surface I think is simply area times thickness. Not sure how
 meaningful that is as area of a vertex depends on the triangle mesh.

 Anyway, you look at smoothed maps on fsaverage. The average volume for
 each vertex should be somewhere in the middle of the individual values
 across time after they have been resampled to fsaverage. You can find the
 mapped files in the base directories. Can you double check that the average
 is in the middle of the time points?

 Best Martin

 Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Martin,
   I am running FS version 5.1.
 This is the command line I ran:

 long_mris_slopes --qdec ./qdec/long.qdec.table.dat --meas volume --hemi
 lh --do-avg --do-rate --do-pc1 --do-spc --do-stack --do-label --time years
 --qcache fsaverage

 These are the outputs I get, which are located in the subjects' base
 template surf folders:

 lh.long.volume-rate.fwhm10.mgh
 lh.long.volume-pc1.fwhm10.mgh
 lh.long.volume-avg.fwhm10.mgh
 lh.long.volume-spc.fwhm10.mgh
 I also get the files that end in fsaverage.mgh.

 I'm a little confused about this volume issue. In a previous post you
 said that long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and
 volume should work). Therefore I used the long_mris_slopes for the volumes
 for a VBM analysis. Please let me know if this would not work. Thank you!

 -Shannon

 On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 4:02 AM, Martin Reuter 
 mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:

 Hi Shannon,

 that cannot be. It either indicates a serious bug (which we have not yet
 encountered in our data) or a problem with your processing.

 Can you send me:
 - the version you use
 - the command line you run
 - the output you get

 Also long_mris_slopes is designed for analyzing surface maps (analysis
 on a vertex by vertex basis). This is usually thickness. So I don't
 understand what 'volumes' you mean? For an ROI analysis based on stats
 files you need to use long_stats_slopes.

 Best, Martin

 On Thu, 2012-09-27 at 11:37 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
  Hi Martin,
   Each subject has 3-6 timepoints. They are all about one year apart.
  Here's an example of the discrepancy: one subject with  5 timepoints
  had volumes that ranged from 2.2-2.4. However, from the
  long_mris_slopes command, the temporal average volume was calculated
  to be 1.67. Thanks for your help!
 
  -Shannon K.
 
  On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 6:21 AM, Martin Reuter
  mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
  Hi Shannon,
 
  long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and
  volume
  should work). In both cases it should compute the temporal
  average.
 
  I have another scripts that works for stats files
  (long_stats_slopes) in
  the same way.
 
  How many time points do you have, how far apart (equally
  spaced?).
 
  Best, Martin
 
  On Wed, 2012-09-26 at 14:59 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
   Hi Martin,
  When I used the long_mris_slopes  command for the
  thickness, the
   average thickness calculated in FreeSurfer was pretty
  similar to
   averaging the values in FreeSurfer. Does this command only
  work
   thickness measures and not for volume or area? Thanks!
  
   -Shannon
  
   On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Martin Reuter
   mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
   Hi Shannon
  
   You probably mean average thickness.
   My scripts compute the temporal average from the
  linear fit
   (at mid time), which can be differed from simply
  averaging
   values.
   Best Martin
  
   Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:
   Hi,
I had a question about how the temporal
  average is
   calculated for subjects with multiple
  timepoints. I
   used the long_mris_slopes command on a
  longitudinal
   set of data. However, when I compared the
  average
   volumes calculated through this command to
  the average
   volumes calculated in excel after extracting
  the same
   vertices at the individual timepoints, these
  values
   did not match up. The average volumes
  calculated
   through long_mris_slopes were smaller.
  Please let me

Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-28 Thread Martin Reuter
Hi Shannon,

that cannot be. It either indicates a serious bug (which we have not yet
encountered in our data) or a problem with your processing.

Can you send me:
- the version you use
- the command line you run
- the output you get

Also long_mris_slopes is designed for analyzing surface maps (analysis
on a vertex by vertex basis). This is usually thickness. So I don't
understand what 'volumes' you mean? For an ROI analysis based on stats
files you need to use long_stats_slopes.

Best, Martin

On Thu, 2012-09-27 at 11:37 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
 Hi Martin,
  Each subject has 3-6 timepoints. They are all about one year apart.
 Here's an example of the discrepancy: one subject with  5 timepoints
 had volumes that ranged from 2.2-2.4. However, from the
 long_mris_slopes command, the temporal average volume was calculated
 to be 1.67. Thanks for your help!
 
 -Shannon K.  
 
 On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 6:21 AM, Martin Reuter
 mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
 Hi Shannon,
 
 long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and
 volume
 should work). In both cases it should compute the temporal
 average.
 
 I have another scripts that works for stats files
 (long_stats_slopes) in
 the same way.
 
 How many time points do you have, how far apart (equally
 spaced?).
 
 Best, Martin
 
 On Wed, 2012-09-26 at 14:59 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
  Hi Martin,
 When I used the long_mris_slopes  command for the
 thickness, the
  average thickness calculated in FreeSurfer was pretty
 similar to
  averaging the values in FreeSurfer. Does this command only
 work
  thickness measures and not for volume or area? Thanks!
 
  -Shannon
 
  On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Martin Reuter
  mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
  Hi Shannon
 
  You probably mean average thickness.
  My scripts compute the temporal average from the
 linear fit
  (at mid time), which can be differed from simply
 averaging
  values.
  Best Martin
 
  Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hi,
   I had a question about how the temporal
 average is
  calculated for subjects with multiple
 timepoints. I
  used the long_mris_slopes command on a
 longitudinal
  set of data. However, when I compared the
 average
  volumes calculated through this command to
 the average
  volumes calculated in excel after extracting
 the same
  vertices at the individual timepoints, these
 values
  did not match up. The average volumes
 calculated
  through long_mris_slopes were smaller.
 Please let me
  know if there is a way to explain this
 discrepancy.
  Thank you!
 
  -Shannon K.
 
 
 
 
 
 __
 
  Freesurfer mailing list
  Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
 
 
 https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer
 
  --
  Sent from my phone, please excuse brevity.
  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
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer


Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-28 Thread Shannon Kogachi
Hi Martin,
  I am running FS version 5.1.
This is the command line I ran:

long_mris_slopes --qdec ./qdec/long.qdec.table.dat --meas volume --hemi lh
--do-avg --do-rate --do-pc1 --do-spc --do-stack --do-label --time years
--qcache fsaverage

These are the outputs I get, which are located in the subjects' base
template surf folders:

lh.long.volume-rate.fwhm10.mgh
lh.long.volume-pc1.fwhm10.mgh
lh.long.volume-avg.fwhm10.mgh
lh.long.volume-spc.fwhm10.mgh
I also get the files that end in fsaverage.mgh.

I'm a little confused about this volume issue. In a previous post you said
that long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and volume
should work). Therefore I used the long_mris_slopes for the volumes for a
VBM analysis. Please let me know if this would not work. Thank you!

-Shannon

On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 4:02 AM, Martin Reuter
mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.eduwrote:

 Hi Shannon,

 that cannot be. It either indicates a serious bug (which we have not yet
 encountered in our data) or a problem with your processing.

 Can you send me:
 - the version you use
 - the command line you run
 - the output you get

 Also long_mris_slopes is designed for analyzing surface maps (analysis
 on a vertex by vertex basis). This is usually thickness. So I don't
 understand what 'volumes' you mean? For an ROI analysis based on stats
 files you need to use long_stats_slopes.

 Best, Martin

 On Thu, 2012-09-27 at 11:37 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
  Hi Martin,
   Each subject has 3-6 timepoints. They are all about one year apart.
  Here's an example of the discrepancy: one subject with  5 timepoints
  had volumes that ranged from 2.2-2.4. However, from the
  long_mris_slopes command, the temporal average volume was calculated
  to be 1.67. Thanks for your help!
 
  -Shannon K.
 
  On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 6:21 AM, Martin Reuter
  mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
  Hi Shannon,
 
  long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and
  volume
  should work). In both cases it should compute the temporal
  average.
 
  I have another scripts that works for stats files
  (long_stats_slopes) in
  the same way.
 
  How many time points do you have, how far apart (equally
  spaced?).
 
  Best, Martin
 
  On Wed, 2012-09-26 at 14:59 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
   Hi Martin,
  When I used the long_mris_slopes  command for the
  thickness, the
   average thickness calculated in FreeSurfer was pretty
  similar to
   averaging the values in FreeSurfer. Does this command only
  work
   thickness measures and not for volume or area? Thanks!
  
   -Shannon
  
   On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Martin Reuter
   mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
   Hi Shannon
  
   You probably mean average thickness.
   My scripts compute the temporal average from the
  linear fit
   (at mid time), which can be differed from simply
  averaging
   values.
   Best Martin
  
   Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:
   Hi,
I had a question about how the temporal
  average is
   calculated for subjects with multiple
  timepoints. I
   used the long_mris_slopes command on a
  longitudinal
   set of data. However, when I compared the
  average
   volumes calculated through this command to
  the average
   volumes calculated in excel after extracting
  the same
   vertices at the individual timepoints, these
  values
   did not match up. The average volumes
  calculated
   through long_mris_slopes were smaller.
  Please let me
   know if there is a way to explain this
  discrepancy.
   Thank you!
  
   -Shannon K.
  
  
  
 
  
  __
  
   Freesurfer mailing list
   Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
  
  
  https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer
  
   --
   Sent from my phone, please excuse brevity.
   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 

Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-28 Thread Martin Reuter
I see,
Usually people look at thickness maps and volume on an ROI basis. Volume on the 
surface I think is simply area times thickness. Not sure how meaningful that is 
as area of a vertex depends on the triangle mesh.

Anyway, you look at smoothed maps on fsaverage. The average volume for each 
vertex should be somewhere in the middle of the individual values across time 
after they have been resampled to fsaverage. You can find the mapped files in 
the base directories. Can you double check that the average is in the middle of 
the time points?
Best Martin

Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:

Hi Martin,
  I am running FS version 5.1.
This is the command line I ran:

long_mris_slopes --qdec ./qdec/long.qdec.table.dat --meas volume --hemi
lh
--do-avg --do-rate --do-pc1 --do-spc --do-stack --do-label --time years
--qcache fsaverage

These are the outputs I get, which are located in the subjects' base
template surf folders:

lh.long.volume-rate.fwhm10.mgh
lh.long.volume-pc1.fwhm10.mgh
lh.long.volume-avg.fwhm10.mgh
lh.long.volume-spc.fwhm10.mgh
I also get the files that end in fsaverage.mgh.

I'm a little confused about this volume issue. In a previous post you
said
that long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and
volume
should work). Therefore I used the long_mris_slopes for the volumes
for a
VBM analysis. Please let me know if this would not work. Thank you!

-Shannon

On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 4:02 AM, Martin Reuter
mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.eduwrote:

 Hi Shannon,

 that cannot be. It either indicates a serious bug (which we have not
yet
 encountered in our data) or a problem with your processing.

 Can you send me:
 - the version you use
 - the command line you run
 - the output you get

 Also long_mris_slopes is designed for analyzing surface maps
(analysis
 on a vertex by vertex basis). This is usually thickness. So I don't
 understand what 'volumes' you mean? For an ROI analysis based on
stats
 files you need to use long_stats_slopes.

 Best, Martin

 On Thu, 2012-09-27 at 11:37 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
  Hi Martin,
   Each subject has 3-6 timepoints. They are all about one year
apart.
  Here's an example of the discrepancy: one subject with  5
timepoints
  had volumes that ranged from 2.2-2.4. However, from the
  long_mris_slopes command, the temporal average volume was
calculated
  to be 1.67. Thanks for your help!
 
  -Shannon K.
 
  On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 6:21 AM, Martin Reuter
  mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
  Hi Shannon,
 
  long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and
  volume
  should work). In both cases it should compute the temporal
  average.
 
  I have another scripts that works for stats files
  (long_stats_slopes) in
  the same way.
 
  How many time points do you have, how far apart (equally
  spaced?).
 
  Best, Martin
 
  On Wed, 2012-09-26 at 14:59 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
   Hi Martin,
  When I used the long_mris_slopes  command for the
  thickness, the
   average thickness calculated in FreeSurfer was pretty
  similar to
   averaging the values in FreeSurfer. Does this command
only
  work
   thickness measures and not for volume or area? Thanks!
  
   -Shannon
  
   On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Martin Reuter
   mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
   Hi Shannon
  
   You probably mean average thickness.
   My scripts compute the temporal average from the
  linear fit
   (at mid time), which can be differed from simply
  averaging
   values.
   Best Martin
  
   Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:
   Hi,
I had a question about how the temporal
  average is
   calculated for subjects with multiple
  timepoints. I
   used the long_mris_slopes command on a
  longitudinal
   set of data. However, when I compared the
  average
   volumes calculated through this command
to
  the average
   volumes calculated in excel after
extracting
  the same
   vertices at the individual timepoints,
these
  values
   did not match up. The average volumes
  calculated
   through long_mris_slopes were smaller.
  Please let me
   know if there is a way to explain this
  discrepancy.
   Thank you!
  
   -Shannon K.
  
  
  
 
  
  

Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-27 Thread Martin Reuter
Hi Shannon,

long_mris_slopes works for surface maps (both thickness and volume
should work). In both cases it should compute the temporal average. 

I have another scripts that works for stats files (long_stats_slopes) in
the same way.

How many time points do you have, how far apart (equally spaced?).

Best, Martin

On Wed, 2012-09-26 at 14:59 -1000, Shannon Kogachi wrote:
 Hi Martin,
When I used the long_mris_slopes  command for the thickness, the
 average thickness calculated in FreeSurfer was pretty similar to
 averaging the values in FreeSurfer. Does this command only work
 thickness measures and not for volume or area? Thanks!
 
 -Shannon 
 
 On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Martin Reuter
 mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu wrote:
 Hi Shannon
 
 You probably mean average thickness.
 My scripts compute the temporal average from the linear fit
 (at mid time), which can be differed from simply averaging
 values.
 Best Martin
 
 Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi,
  I had a question about how the temporal average is
 calculated for subjects with multiple timepoints. I
 used the long_mris_slopes command on a longitudinal
 set of data. However, when I compared the average
 volumes calculated through this command to the average
 volumes calculated in excel after extracting the same
 vertices at the individual timepoints, these values
 did not match up. The average volumes calculated
 through long_mris_slopes were smaller. Please let me
 know if there is a way to explain this discrepancy.
 Thank you!
 
 -Shannon K.
 
 
 
 __
 
 Freesurfer mailing list
 Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
 
 https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer
 
 -- 
 Sent from my phone, please excuse brevity.
 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.
 
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 Shannon Kogachi
 Clinical Research Coordinator
 
 Neuroscience and MRI Research Program
 Department of Medicine
 JABSOM, University of Hawaii
 1356 Lusitana Street, 7th Floor
 Honolulu, HI 96813
 (808) 691 - 8763


___
Freesurfer mailing list
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer


[Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-26 Thread Shannon Kogachi
Hi,
 I had a question about how the temporal average is calculated for subjects
with multiple timepoints. I used the long_mris_slopes command on a
longitudinal set of data. However, when I compared the average volumes
calculated through this command to the average volumes calculated in excel
after extracting the same vertices at the individual timepoints, these
values did not match up. The average volumes calculated through
long_mris_slopes were smaller. Please let me know if there is a way to
explain this discrepancy. Thank you!

-Shannon K.
___
Freesurfer mailing list
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
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.


Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-26 Thread Martin Reuter
Hi Shannon

You probably mean average thickness.
My scripts compute the temporal average from the linear fit (at mid time), 
which can be differed from simply averaging values.
Best Martin

Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:

Hi,
I had a question about how the temporal average is calculated for
subjects
with multiple timepoints. I used the long_mris_slopes command on a
longitudinal set of data. However, when I compared the average volumes
calculated through this command to the average volumes calculated in
excel
after extracting the same vertices at the individual timepoints, these
values did not match up. The average volumes calculated through
long_mris_slopes were smaller. Please let me know if there is a way to
explain this discrepancy. Thank you!

-Shannon K.




___
Freesurfer mailing list
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer

-- 
Sent from my phone, please excuse brevity.___
Freesurfer mailing list
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
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.


Re: [Freesurfer] long_mris_slopes command: temporal average calculation

2012-09-26 Thread Shannon Kogachi
Hi Martin,
   When I used the long_mris_slopes  command for the thickness, the average
thickness calculated in FreeSurfer was pretty similar to averaging the
values in FreeSurfer. Does this command only work thickness measures and
not for volume or area? Thanks!

-Shannon

On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Martin Reuter
mreu...@nmr.mgh.harvard.eduwrote:

 Hi Shannon

 You probably mean average thickness.
 My scripts compute the temporal average from the linear fit (at mid time),
 which can be differed from simply averaging values.
 Best Martin

 Shannon Kogachi skoga...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi,
  I had a question about how the temporal average is calculated for
 subjects with multiple timepoints. I used the long_mris_slopes command on a
 longitudinal set of data. However, when I compared the average volumes
 calculated through this command to the average volumes calculated in excel
 after extracting the same vertices at the individual timepoints, these
 values did not match up. The average volumes calculated through
 long_mris_slopes were smaller. Please let me know if there is a way to
 explain this discrepancy. Thank you!

 -Shannon K.

 --

 Freesurfer mailing list
 Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
 https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer


 --
 Sent from my phone, please excuse brevity.

 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.




-- 
Shannon Kogachi
Clinical Research Coordinator

Neuroscience and MRI Research Program
Department of Medicine
JABSOM, University of Hawaii
1356 Lusitana Street, 7th Floor
Honolulu, HI 96813
(808) 691 - 8763
___
Freesurfer mailing list
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
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.