ACCS Brain Imaging Workshop Series: Lecture on working with sMRI data within CVL.
ACCS launches into 2022 with a new Brain Imaging Workshop Series. During the first public lecture, which ran in March 2022, Dr Chao Suo from Monash University introduced the topic of structural MRI analysis. Dr Suo explored how researchers can use the Characterisation Virtual Laboratory (CVL) to achieve complex workflows for their analyses.
Previous Brain Imaging Webinar Series here
To access presentation slides and other Brain Imaging training material click here.
Watch the recording of the Webinar
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is one of the most commonly used methods in neuroscience research. The CVL has provided a suite of imaging processing tools and pipelines for various MR modalities. Many popular imaging tools (e.g. Freesurfer, FSL, SPM, fMRIprep, MRtrix) have been pre-installed and are available to users in a number of different versions [1]. Together with the large capacity of the parallel computing system available at MASSIVE, the CVL platform helps researchers to process and visualise their data [2].
1.https://docs.massive.org.au/M3/software/m3availablemodules.html#m3availablemodules
2.Goscinski et al. (2014) The multi-modal Australian ScienceS Imaging and Visualization Environment (MASSIVE) high-performance computing infrastructure: applications in neuroscience and neuroinformatics research. https://doi.org/10.3389/fninf.2014.00030.