AFNI Message Board

Dear AFNI users-

We are very pleased to announce that the new AFNI Message Board framework is up! Please join us at:

https://discuss.afni.nimh.nih.gov

Existing user accounts have been migrated, so returning users can login by requesting a password reset. New users can create accounts, as well, through a standard account creation process. Please note that these setup emails might initially go to spam folders (esp. for NIH users!), so please check those locations in the beginning.

The current Message Board discussion threads have been migrated to the new framework. The current Message Board will remain visible, but read-only, for a little while.

Sincerely, AFNI HQ

History of AFNI updates  

|
October 19, 2004 04:40PM
I think Ziad will address this, but if the number of nodes
is different, the 2 surfaces cannot possibly have a 1-1
correspondence between the nodes. Therefore they
must not have the same LDP.

Perhaps using pial, you are getting only 1 surface
mapped, and therefore are seeing only the pial shell
intersection. You can set vol2surf debug level to 1 to
see which surfaces are being used.

- rick

Subject Author Posted

warning, too many surfaces for LDP

Kevin DeSimone October 19, 2004 02:48PM

Re: warning, too many surfaces for LDP

Ziad S. Saad October 19, 2004 03:31PM

Re: warning, too many surfaces for LDP

rick reynols October 19, 2004 03:35PM

Re: warning, too many surfaces for LDP

Kevin DeSimone October 19, 2004 04:16PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

rick reynols October 19, 2004 03:49PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

Kevin DeSimone October 19, 2004 04:33PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

rick reynols October 19, 2004 04:40PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

Ziad S. Saad October 19, 2004 05:16PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

Kevin DeSimone October 20, 2004 10:44AM

Re: warning: different # nodes

Ziad S. Saad October 20, 2004 12:57PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

Kevin DeSimone October 20, 2004 02:38PM

Re: warning: different # nodes

Kai Schreiber December 12, 2004 08:20PM