Coordinate systems

Subject Coordinate System (SCS / CTF)

Brainstorm uses the CTF coordinate sytem. All the surfaces, sensors and additional points are converted into this system when they are imported in Brainstorm.

It is defined in the following way:

Nasion (NAS)

The nasion is the intersection of the frontal and two nasal bones of the human skull. Its manifestation on the visible surface of the face is a distinctly depressed area directly between the eyes, just superior to the bridge of the nose (source: Wikipedia).

Use the coronal orientation to define it.

NAS.gif

Pre-auricular points (LPA, RPA)

The proper definition of the preauricular point is: "a point of the posterior root of the zygomatic arch lying immediately in front of the upper end of the tragus". This is illustrated with the green point below. The problem with this definition is that it can be really difficult to localize precisely on the MRI. It can lead to severe misregistration between MRI and MEG/EEG. More information on the anatomical location of this point on the FieldTrip website.

Our proposition is to use instead the junction between the tragus and the helix, marked with a red dot in the following figure. It can be located much more precisely both anatomically and on the MRI slices.

preauricular.gif

Use the sagittal orientation to define it.

LPA.gif

You can choose to use this definition of the "preauricular point" or not. The most important is to use the same convention for all the steps: digitization of head points with a magnetic system (Isotrak Polhemus, ...), and analysis with Brainstorm.

Notes for CTF users

Using a CTF system, you would probably prefer to use the head localization coils to indicate those NAS/LPA/RPA points, instead of those "anatomically correct" points. The coordinate system in the CTF files is based on the position of the three coils you stick on the head of the subject. Typically, the nose coil is slightly above the nasion, and the ear coils about one centimeter more frontal than the points that were previously described.

A good practice is to take pictures of the subject with the coils on, right before bringing him/her in the MEG, and digitize the position of the center of the coils as the nasion/LPA/RPA. Then, when importing the MRI in Brainstorm, try marking as accurately as possible the position of the coils in the MRI. You cannot be very precise at this point, but the errors here are fixed later with the automatic registration.

LPA.gif

IMPORTANT: Those comments do not apply if you use the Brainstorm Digitize program to drive the Polhemus device. In this case, you are asked to digitize two sets of NAS/LPA/RPA points: the coils and the real anatomical points. Just make a copy of the .pos file saved by Digitize in the .ds folder, then set the real anatomical points in the MRI. Brainstorm is going to handle automatically the transformation between the CTF coils coordinate system and the real subject coordinate system. The result is usually much more accurate and does not require to take pictures of the subjects.

Using a default anatomy

The fiducial points (Nasion, LPA, RPA) used in your recordings might not be the same as the ones used in the anatomy templates in Brainstorm (Colin27, ICBM, FSAverage). By default, the LPA/RPA points are defined at the junction between the tragus and the helix, as represented with the red dot.

If you want to use an anatomy template but you are using a different convention when digitizing the position of those points, you have to modify the default positions of the template with the MRI Viewer.

MNI coordinates

Two types of normalized coordinates are widely used in the literature: the atlas defined by Jean Talairach, and the MNI stereotaxic coordinates. They both rely on two points, the posterior and anterior commissure, and the midsagittal plane. The third point needed here, the interhemispheric point, is used to define this plane. You can read about the differences between those two systems on that page:
http://imaging.mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk/imaging/MniTalairach

Two of the template anatomies distributed with Brainstorm (Colin27 and ICBM152) are registered in the MNI stereotaxic space, therefore the AC/PC coordinates we get are directly in "MNI coordinates". For those two brains, you can read the normalized MNI coordinates directly in the interface ("MRI Viewer" or "Get coordinates" menu). The values should be almost identical to what you get when opening those volumes with the "Display" program from the MINC tools.

Those coordinates are valid as a normalized coordinate system only when working with volumes that have been transformed to the MNI stereotaxic space. On individual MR volumes they are just one coordinate system among others, they cannot be used as a normalized reference. To avoid confusion, they are disabled for all the brains other than the MNI templates (Colin27 or ICBM152).

To get the position of a brain activity pattern in normalized MNI coordinates:

  1. Project the source results on the template brain (see the Coregistration tutorial)

  2. Read the MNI coordinates from these projected sources in the MRI viewer or using the "Get coordinates" menu.

Anterior commissure (AC)

Description of the anterior commissure at this Wikipedia page.

Technique to localize it:

AC.gif

Posterior commissure (PC)

Description of the posterior commissure at this Wikipedia page.

Technique to localize it:

PC.gif

Interhemispheric point (IH)

Pick any point in the interhemispheric space, somewhere in the top of the head. Do not use a point too close from the commissures.

IH.gif

Neuromag coordinates

This coordinates system is not used in Brainstorm, and described here only FYI. All the information contained in Neuromag .FIF files are in this CS, and converted to Brainstorm SCS at importation.

It is defined in the following way:

Converting between coordinate systems

MRI (voxels) to MRI (millimeters)

Get the structure sMri from the database: right-click on the MRI file > File > Export to Matlab > sMri.

For one point P_mri(x,y,z), coordinates in voxels:

For a set of points P_mri, size: [nPoints x 3]:

MRI (meters) to SCS (meters)

You need the a structure sMri that contains at least the information about the fiducial points (nasion, left ear, right ear). Coordinates of the reference points in millimeters.

To compute the transformation (rotation + translation) from the MRI coordinate system (millimeters) to the Brainstorm Subject CS (SCS, meters):

In case the transformation fields are not available yet in the sMri.SCS structure:

To apply the transformation to a set of points P_mri(x,y,z), dimension P=[N,3], coordinates in meters:

Or (P_mri and P_scs still in meters):

MRI (voxels) to SCS (meters)

The successive transformations are: MRI (voxels) => MRI (millimeters) => SCS (millimteres) => SCS (meters)

SCS (meters) to MRI (voxels)

SCS (meters) => SCS (millimteres) => MRI (millimeters) => MRI (voxels)

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CoordinateSystems (last edited 2014-04-18 21:34:47 by 69)