- Spatial normalization
In
neuroimaging , spatial normalization is animage processing step, more specifically animage registration method. Human brains differ in size and shape, and one goal of spatial normalization is to deform human brain scans so one location in one subject's brain scan corresponds to the same location in another subject's brain scan.It is often performed in research-based
functional neuroimaging where one wants to find common brain activation across multiple human subjects. The brain scan can be obtained frommagnetic resonance imaging (MRI) orpositron emission tomography (PET) scanners.There are two steps in the spatial normalization process:
* Specification/estimation of warp-field
* Application of warp-field with resamplingThe estimation of the warp-field can be performed in one modality, e.g., MRI, and be applied in another modality, e.g., PET, if MRI and PET scans exist for the same subject and they are coregistered.Spatial normalization typically employs a 3-dimensional nonrigid transformation model (a "warp-field") for warping a brain scan to a template.The warp-field might be parametrized by
basis function s such ascosine and polynomia.There is a number of programs that implement both estimation and application of a warp-field. It is a part of the SPM and AIR programs.
See also
*
Voxel-based morphometry
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