MarsAtlas is a model of cortical parcellation. It can be applied to any cortical surface via the HipHop parameterization pipeline, available in the BrainVisa Cortical Surface Toolbox, under the Anatomy category.
MarsAtlas has been developed in collaboration with Andrea Brovelli and Guillaume Auzias at INT.
You can get details on the MarsAtlas page.
In the paper below we added subcortical structures to the atlas:
Brovelli, A., Badier, J.-M., Bonini, F., Bartolomei, F., Coulon*, O., & Auzias*, G. (2017). Dynamic Reconfiguration of Visuomotor-Related Functional Connectivity Networks. The Journal of Neuroscience, 37(4), 839–853. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1672-16.2017 (*equal contribution)
Subcortical structures are imported from the Freesurfer segmentation. We present below a short tutorial on how to produce the MarsAtlas + subcortical structures segmentation on any data.
The table of cortical regions is given on the MarsAtlas page. Additional subcortical labels are given below:
Left Index | Right Index | Name |
210 | 249 | Thalamus |
211 | 250 | Caudate |
212 | 251 | Puttamen |
213 | 252 | Pallidum |
217 | 253 | Hippocampus |
218 | 254 | Amygdala |
226 | 258 | Accumbens |
ColorMap
In order to visualize properly the atlas, with the same colours than the picture above, and no neighboring regions with the same color, you need to use the color map ‘MarsAtlas-subCortical’.
At the moment, this colormap does not come with BrainVisa. Until next version is released, you will have to download it here. In your home directory, find the ‘.anatomist‘ directory, and create a ‘rgb‘ directory inside it. Just unzip the zip file into $HOME/.anatomist/rgb/
Once anatomist is restarted, the colormap should appear at the bottom of the colormaps list.
How To:
In order to get the entire cortical + subcortical parcellation, segmentations need to be performed with FreeSurfer. This can be done using the FreeSurfer toolbox. Segmentations can then be imported to BrainVisa for surface reconstruction, sulcal labelling, and cortical parcellation. Below is a short tutorial showing each step. Most of this tutorial has been written with Andrea Brovelli. For specific details of each process, refer to the BrainVisa documentation.