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Color schemes to represent the orientation of anisotropic tissues from diffusion tensor data: Application to white matter fiber tract mapping in the human brain

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TLDR
Directionally encoded color (DEC) maps of the human brain obtained using empirical or heuristic schemes clearly show the main association, projection, and commissural white matter pathways.
Abstract
This paper investigates the use of color to represent the directional information contained in the diffusion tensor. Ideally, one wants to take into account both the properties of human color vision and of the given display hardware to produce a representation in which differences in the orientation of anisotropic structures are proportional to the perceived differences in color. It is argued here that such a goal cannot be achieved in general and therefore, empirical or heuristic schemes, which avoid some of the common artifacts of previously proposed approaches, are implemented. Directionally encoded color (DEC) maps of the human brain obtained using these schemes clearly show the main association, projection, and commissural white matter pathways. In the brainstem, motor and sensory pathways are easily identified and can be differentiated from the transverse pontine fibers and the cerebellar peduncles. DEC maps obtained from diffusion tensor imaging data provide a simple and effective way to visualize fiber direction, useful for investigating the structural anatomy of different organs. Magn Reson Med 42:526‐540, 1999. r 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diffusion Tensor Imaging of the Brain

TL;DR: Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a promising method for characterizing microstructural changes or differences with neuropathology and treatment and the biological mechanisms, acquisition, and analysis of DTI measurements are addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fiber tracking: Principles and strategies - A technical review

TL;DR: The state of the art of reconstruction of the axonal tracts in the central nervous system (CNS) using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is reviewed, including both data acquisition and the elaborate fiber reconstruction algorithms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fiber tract-based atlas of human white matter anatomy.

TL;DR: Two- and three-dimensional white matter atlases were created on the basis of high-spatial-resolution diffusion tensor magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and 3D tract reconstruction and showed which anatomic structures can be identified on diffusion Tensor images and where these anatomic units are located at each section level and orientation.
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Perisylvian language networks of the human brain.

TL;DR: The anatomical findings are relevant to the evolution of language, provide a framework for Lichtheim's symptom‐based neurological model of aphasia, and constrain, anatomically, contemporary connectionist accounts of language.
Journal ArticleDOI

Virtual in vivo interactive dissection of white matter fasciculi in the human brain

TL;DR: The use of diffusion tensor magnetic resonance tractography to visualize the three-dimensional structure of the major white matter fasciculi within living human brain adds a new dimension to anatomical descriptions of the living humanbrain.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

MR diffusion tensor spectroscopy and imaging.

TL;DR: Once Deff is estimated from a series of NMR pulsed-gradient, spin-echo experiments, a tissue's three orthotropic axes can be determined and the effective diffusivities along these orthotropic directions are the eigenvalues of Deff.
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Estimation of the Effective Self-Diffusion Tensor from the NMR Spin Echo

TL;DR: The diagonal and off-diagonal elements of the effective self-diffusion tensor, Deff, are related to the echo intensity in an NMR spin-echo experiment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a quantitative assessment of diffusion anisotropy

TL;DR: New indices calculated from the entire diffusion tensor are rotationally invariant (RI) and show that anisotropy is highly variable in different white matter regions depending on the degree of coherence of fiber tract directions.

Diffusion Tensor MR Imaging ofthe Human Brain

TL;DR: A quantitative characterization of water diffusion in anisotropic, heterogeneously oriented tissues is clinically feasible and should improve the neuroradiologic assessment of a variety of gray and white matter disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diffusion tensor MR imaging of the human brain.

TL;DR: In this paper, the intrinsic properties of water diffusion in normal human brain were assessed by using quantitative parameters derived from the diffusion tensor, D, which are insensitive to patient orientation and showed that diffusion appeared cylindrically symmetric.
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