Hi Sunderland,
As to your questions:
> Is this ROI-wise approach logical, or is it an issue that I am converting from fixel-wise to voxel-wise.
It is logical and have been done many times in other studies.
> What I had been doing was creating a mask of the significant results, binarizing it,
We might do the same until this step.
> and using that as a mask to restrict the tractography.
This may be the point where it may not work out.
I would just get region statistics and correlate the statistics
with study variables.
>
> Is a different approach, say, tract-based spatial statistics, more appropriate for these post-hoc analyses we are proposing? Thank you for your help.
TBSS is a different framework, and won't be able to use
correlational tractography results because the findings are limited on
skeleton.
>
> An additional question we had was how the tractography is computing a general tractogram (i.e., the .tt.gz file) across an entire sample? What approach is used to threshold these images to gain the "most likely signature" across a sample?
I recommend taking a look at the workshop videos available at
practicum.labsolver.org. They provide comprehensive insights into
conventional, differential, and correlational tractography.
It's completely understandable to find correlational tractography
challenging to start with. Its concepts are actually built upon
conventional and differential tractography, so understanding those
first can often make it much clearer.
Best,
Frank
>
> Best,
> Sunderland Baker
> Department of Biobehavioral Health, Penn State University
>
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