Difference between revisions of "FreeSurfer 2016"
Schwietzer (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Introduction == FreeSurfer is a software package for the analysis and visualization of structural and functional neuroimaging data from cross-sectional or longitudinal stud...") |
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== Installed version == | == Installed version == | ||
The currently installed version is provided on | The currently installed version is provided... | ||
on environment ''hpc-env/6.4'': | |||
''FreeSurfer/6.0.1''' | ''FreeSurfer/6.0.1''' | ||
on environment ''hpc-env/8.3'': | |||
''FreeSurfer/7.1.0''' | |||
== Using FreeSurfer == | == Using FreeSurfer == |
Revision as of 06:27, 13 May 2020
Introduction
FreeSurfer is a software package for the analysis and visualization of structural and functional neuroimaging data from cross-sectional or longitudinal studies. It is developed by the Laboratory for Computational Neuroimaging at the Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging. FreeSurfer is the structural MRI analysis software of choice for the Human Connectome Project. 1
Installed version
The currently installed version is provided... on environment hpc-env/6.4:
FreeSurfer/6.0.1'
on environment hpc-env/8.3:
FreeSurfer/7.1.0'
Using FreeSurfer
If you want to find out more about FreeSurfer on the HPC Cluster, you can use the command
module spider FreeSurfer
This will show you basic informations e.g. a short description and the currently installed version.
To load the desired version of the module, use the command, e.g.
module load hpc-env/6.4 module load FreeSurfer
Always remember: this command is case sensitive!
Testing FreeSurfer
If you load FreeSurfer for the first time, the folders freesurfer/subjects will be created in your home directory. If you want to try out the program, you can use the sample files stored in the installation directory. Copy the samples into your personal folder:
cp -r $EBROOTFREESURFER/subjects/sample* ~/freesurfer/subjects cd ~/freesurfer/subjects
Now you have stored two sample files to work with in your subjects directory. An example usage of these files, to create a new subject, called 'ernie', and to run the first stage (averaging, intensity normalization and skull-strip) would be:
recon-all -s ernie -i $SUBJECTS_DIR/sample-001.mgz -i $SUBJECTS_DIR/sample-002.mgz -autorecon1
Documentation
The full documentation can be found here.