Hi - well we had quite a few other confounds too - and didn't dig deep into 
their correlations with the imaging measures (though the deconfounding overall 
does have quite a strong effect as can be seen in the different results 
presented in MegaTrawl). 

One obvious reason for not rushing to do sex is that it's hard to separate out 
gross effects (eg head size) from "true" interesting effects, and of course 
results quickly get controversial and need very careful and thorough 
interpretation.

Cheers.



> On 18 Oct 2018, at 18:51, Keith Jamison <kjami...@umn.edu> wrote:
> 
> Was there a reason for that omission?  They seem like obvious dimensions of 
> interest (age less so, given the narrow range).
> 
> Keith
> 
> On Oct 18, 2018 10:49 AM, "Stephen Smith" <st...@fmrib.ox.ac.uk 
> <mailto:st...@fmrib.ox.ac.uk>> wrote:
> Hi
> No I don’t think we explicitly calculated those things. 
> Cheers. 
> 
> --------------------
> Stephen M. Smith,  Professor of Biomedical Engineering
> Head of Analysis,   Oxford University FMRIB Centre
> 
> FMRIB, JR Hospital, Headington,
> Oxford. OX3 9 DU, UK
> +44 (0) 1865 610470
> st...@fmrib.ox.ac.uk <mailto:st...@fmrib.ox.ac.uk>
> http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/~steve <http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/~steve>
> ----------------------
> 
> On 18 Oct 2018, at 15:04, Keith Jamison <kjami...@umn.edu 
> <mailto:kjami...@umn.edu>> wrote:
> 
>> We just noticed that certain subject measures such as age and sex are not 
>> included in the megatrawl results. I see in the release documentation that 
>> these are among the covariates removed before regressing the other 
>> quantities. Are there also results/stats somewhere from regressing netmats 
>> against these quantities themselves?
>> 
>> Thanks!
>> -Keith
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> HCP-Users mailing list
>> HCP-Users@humanconnectome.org <mailto:HCP-Users@humanconnectome.org>
>> http://lists.humanconnectome.org/mailman/listinfo/hcp-users 
>> <http://lists.humanconnectome.org/mailman/listinfo/hcp-users>


---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stephen M. Smith, Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Head of Analysis,  WIN (FMRIB) Oxford

FMRIB, JR Hospital, Headington, Oxford  OX3 9DU, UK
+44 (0) 1865 610470
st...@fmrib.ox.ac.uk    http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/~steve 
<http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/~steve>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Stop the cultural destruction of Tibet <http://smithinks.net/>









_______________________________________________
HCP-Users mailing list
HCP-Users@humanconnectome.org
http://lists.humanconnectome.org/mailman/listinfo/hcp-users

Reply via email to