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High-resolution Structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Human Subcortex In Vivo and Postmortem

DOI :

10.3791/53309-v

December 30th, 2015

December 30th, 2015

15,196 Views

1Department of Biology and Centre for Vision Research, York University, 2York MRI Facility, York University, 3Department of Ophthalmology & Vision Sciences, Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto

Here we present a protocol to determine the minimum number images that needed to be registered and averaged to resolve subcortical structures and test whether the individual layers of the LGN could be resolved in the absence of physiological noise.

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High resolution

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