2011
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-18421-5_17
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A Texture Manifold for Curve-Based Morphometry of the Cerebral Cortex

Abstract: Abstract. The cortical surface of the human brain is composed of folds that are juxtaposed alongside one another. Several methods have been proposed to study the shape of these folds, e.g., by first segmenting them on the cortical surface or by analysis via a continuous deformation of a common template. A major disadvantage of these methods is that, while they can localize shape differences, they cannot easily identify the directions in which they occur. The type of deformation that causes a fold to change in … Show more

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“…The orientation field shows that the folds in question have a smaller width in the elderly populations. We tested the significance of the shape difference along this direction using the permutation test presented in [3] and found the result to be slightly more significant than presented in Figure 6.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The orientation field shows that the folds in question have a smaller width in the elderly populations. We tested the significance of the shape difference along this direction using the permutation test presented in [3] and found the result to be slightly more significant than presented in Figure 6.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%