Shape Analysis on Neuroimaging Data: Difference between revisions

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Tanya Glozman
Tanya Glozman


'''Tanya Glozman
'''
== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==



Revision as of 23:00, 20 March 2014


Tanya Glozman

Tanya Glozman

Introduction

- Motivate the problem. More details are required for custom projects.

Data

Methods

- Describe your algorithm or approach. 
- Detail any issues or problems that were particularly important. 
- Emphasize the parts of the project that you wrote (instead of ISET or downloaded code). 
- Describe the analysis in enough detail so that someone could understand and repeat your analysis. 
- What data and software did you use? What were the ideas of the algorithm and data analysis?

Results

- Organize your results in a good logical order (not necessarily historical order). 
- Include relevant graphs and/or images. Make sure graph axes are labeled.
-  Make sure you draw the reader's attention to the key element of the figure. 
- The key aspect should be the most visible element of the figure or graph. Help the reader by writing a clear figure caption.

Conclusions

- Describe what you learned. What worked? What didn't? Why? What would you do if you kept working on the project?

References

_ List references. Include links to papers that are online.

Appendix I

This project is ongoing. The data was acquired through collaboration with Dr. Franco Pestilli (for the connectome data )and Prof. Tony Norcia's group (for the structural MRI data. I am not free to share the data. Since we are hoping to publish the results of this work, we prefer to not share the code currently. Please email tanyagl@stanford.edu if you'd like to learn more.