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Bactrian camel neuroimaging: magnetic resonance, T1 weighted (set 1): saggital view

Description

Abstract:
These files contain magnetic resonance data collected using the specified relaxation time constant. Each set of volumetric data has been resampled in axial, coronal, and sagittal views and saved as three sets of DICOM data. Only image files containing visible brain tissue have been saved and included in this set. Overall, the MR studies show clear white-­gray differentiation and accurate anatomical representation. Magnetic resonance data was collected at Brown University on a Siemens 3 Tesla PRISMA scanner. The following conditions apply to this data: Expansion: 3D Magnetization Prepared Rapid Acquisition GRE (MP RAGE). Number of Excitations (NEX): 1. Transfer Syntax: Little Endian Explicit. Slice Thickness: 600.00 μm. L­-R Angle: -86°. S-­I Angle: 4°. Scan Mode: t1_mprage 1 NEX. Number of Slices: 192.
Notes:
Imaging modalities: Magnetic resonance
View: Sagittal view

Citation

Walsh, Edward, Collins, Scott, Leary, Owen, et al., "Bactrian camel neuroimaging: magnetic resonance, T1 weighted (set 1): saggital view" (2016). Bactrian Camel Brain Imaging, Brown University Open Data Collection. Brown Digital Repository. Brown University Library. https://doi.org/10.7301/Z00C4SPV

Relations

Has Parts:

  • README for Magnetic resonance studies
    • Type: Pdf
    • Order: 1
    • View
  • README for T1 weighted camel brain (Set 1)
    • Type: Pdf
    • Order: 2
    • View

Collections:

  • Bactrian Camel Brain Imaging

    This case study is the result of collaboration between neuroanthropology researchers at George Washington University and neuroimaging researchers at Rhode Island Hospital & Brown University and serves as a means of exploring the efficacy of several medical imaging modalities in …

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  • Brown University Open Data Collection

    This collection contains open and publicly-funded data sets created by Brown University faculty and student researchers. Increasingly, publishers, and funders are requiring that protocols, data sets, metadata, and code underlying published research be retained and preserved, their locations cited within …
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