Real Video Presentations from



The fMRI Data Center 2002 Summer Workshop at Dartmouth College

July 8 - 10, 2002


The talks featured above require that Realplayer software and either Netscape or Internet Explorer be installed on your PC. More particularly, they require that the "Realplayer plug-in" be installed in the plug-ins folder of your browser. If you do not have the "Realplayer plug-in," a free version of Realplayer (which includes the plug-in) is available at:


"http://www.real.com/"

The talks will run on a Mac, but not from this index. The ".rm" files must be opened directly from within their respective folders, and windows for viewing the slides must be adjusted manually. You may also find it necessary, on the Macintosh, to increase the memory alotted to your browser by several thousand kilobytes in order to get these lectures to run properly. This version of the talks will not run on Unix machines.

 

 

 

 


 

Introduction to the 2002 Summer Workshops
Jack Van Horn, Dartmouth College

fMRI: Issues in Experimental Design and Analysis


fMRI: Past, Present and Future
Peter Bandettini, NIMH

Image Registration for fMRI
Roger Woods, M.D., UCLA Division of Brain Mapping

Significant Pixels

Tools for Exploratory and Multivariate
Analysis of Neuroimaging Data
Benjamin Bly, Rutgers-Newark Psychology, UMD-NJMS Radiology

Assessing the Significance of Excursiion Regions
in Functional Brain Imagery via Spatial Scan Analysis
and Importance Sampling
Carey E. Priebe, Johns Hopkins University


Machine Learning and fMRI Analysis
Tom M. Mitchell, Carnagie Mellon University

Large Scale Archiving for Neuroimaging Study Data:
Rationale, Progress, and Research
John Darrell Van Horn, Dartmouth College

Distributed Representation of Objects
in the Human Ventral Visual Pathway
Alumit Ishai, NIMH

Functional MRI and the Study of Human Consciousness
Dan Lloyd, Trinity College


The Exotic

Pt. 1: HCP for IGT
Pt. 2: 3D Slicer Software Demonstration

Ron Kikinis, M.D., Brigham and Women's Hospital

Exploring Information Visualization
Benjamin Fry, MIT Media Lab