Producing Tables of Coordinates (SPM): Difference between revisions

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You can (and should) save the SPM output to a postscript (.ps) file at this point. The .ps file can be opened in Adobe Acrobat Reader.
You can (and should) save the SPM output to a postscript (.ps) file at this point. The .ps file can be opened in Adobe Acrobat Reader.


== Generating the Table of Coordinates for a Manuscript ==
A properly formatted table of coordinates should have the following structure:
A properly formatted table of coordinates should have the following structure:
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== Sample Table ==
=== Sample Table ===
{|
{|
! style="border-style: solid; border-width: 1px 0px 1px 0px;" | Region (BA)
! style="border-style: solid; border-width: 1px 0px 1px 0px;" | Region (BA)

Revision as of 10:54, 24 March 2016

Most neuroimaging papers include a section in the results describing some statistical comparison (or contrast) between two or more conditions (one of those conditions might be an implicit baseline). This is probably what comes to mind when you think of presentations of fMRI research showing what I refer to as "blobs of activation", and what people are generally referring to when they say that some part of the brain "lights up" when doing some task.

Along with figures showing beautiful renderings of these statistical comparisons, the presentation of these findings should also include a tabular summary of these data because a 2D rendering of 3D data loses much precision. Numerical data may also later be entered into a meta-analysis, whereas a figure cannot. The procedure below describes how to generate the table of coordinates that should accompany the figure produced by following the wiki entry for producing a contrast rendering.

Obtaining the SPM Table of Coordinates

'Note that the table of coordinates should be produced using identical parameters to those used to produce the brain renderings. This is most easily done by producing the table and the 3D contrast volume at the same time.'

In SPM, load the contrast of interest

  1. Select Results from the GUI interface
  2. Identify the SPM.mat file of interest. For a group-level contrast (the typical case), there should be an SPM.mat file in the directory designated to receive the Random Effects analysis results
  3. Select the contrast of interest
  4. Assign the desired uncorrected (or FWE corrected) significance threshold and extent threshold (if any; the default extent threshold value is 0)
  5. FILL OUT THE REST-- I CAN'T REMEMBER THE EXACT BUTTON NAMES

You can (and should) save the SPM output to a postscript (.ps) file at this point. The .ps file can be opened in Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Generating the Table of Coordinates for a Manuscript

A properly formatted table of coordinates should have the following structure:

Region (BA) Size SIG Max Z x y z
Table data here
Note: L, left; R, right; BA, Brodmann Area; Size, cluster size measured in voxels (or mm^3);
FDR, FDR-corrected significance level (used for SIG column; alternatively, FWE, Family-wise error corrected significance level);
Max Z, maximum Z statistic reported for cluster. Coordinates reflect standard MNI space

Sample Table

Region (BA) Size FDR Max Z x y z
R. Superior Temporal Gyrus (BA 21) 861 < 0.001 6.58 63 -27 3
L. Superior Temporal Gyrus (BA 48/21) 1009 < 0.001 6.09 -57 -9 -3
Note: L, left; R, right; BA, Brodmann Area; Size, cluster size measured in voxels ';
FDR, FDR-corrected significance level ;
Max Z, maximum Z statistic reported for cluster. Coordinates reflect standard MNI space

If you have many occurrences of the same anatomical region, you might use standard abbreviations (e.g., STG: Superior Temporal Gyrus; IFG: Inferior Frontal Gyrus) to make your tables more compact. Abbreviations should be listed in the table notes.