Paper
13 March 2013 Cortical thickness changes related to the processes of maturation and aging in healthy brains
Heitor H. Cunha, Antonio C. Santos, Sara Rosset, Carlos E. G. Salmon
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 8669, Medical Imaging 2013: Image Processing; 86693V (2013) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2007342
Event: SPIE Medical Imaging, 2013, Lake Buena Vista (Orlando Area), Florida, United States
Abstract
Normal aging is accompanied by global as well as regional structural changes. While these age-related changes in gray matter volume have been extensively studied, less has been done using newer morphological indexes, such as cortical thickness and surface area and the studies usually focus on subjects older than 19. Here, we analyzed structural images of 143 healthy volunteers, ranging from 6 to 86 years of age, using FreeSurfer to support the parcellation, and proposed a way to compute the regional changes of cortical thickness that occurs in human brains from childhood to elderliness. We separated the whole process in two stages: maturation and aging, and compute the best threshold for each region, allowing to identify when those processes begin, their velocities and the relation to some degenerative diseases.
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Heitor H. Cunha, Antonio C. Santos, Sara Rosset, and Carlos E. G. Salmon "Cortical thickness changes related to the processes of maturation and aging in healthy brains", Proc. SPIE 8669, Medical Imaging 2013: Image Processing, 86693V (13 March 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2007342
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KEYWORDS
Brain

Neodymium

Neuroimaging

Magnetic resonance imaging

Statistical analysis

Image analysis

Image processing

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