[MINC-development] MINC2 file with floating-point voxels and slice normalization

Vladimir S. FONOV vladimir.fonov at gmail.com
Wed Mar 20 15:50:52 EDT 2013


I think the question here is how to disable it for non floating point data?

On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 3:39 PM, Andrew Janke <a.janke at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Alex,
>
> On 21 March 2013 04:11, Alex Zijdenbos <zijdenbos at gmail.com> wrote:
>> I personally think it would make much more sense to make slice-based scaling
>> the special case, and global scaling the default. In other words, let users
>> turn slice-based scaling on when they have an application that requires it;
>> but keep it off by default. Alternatively, even adding an option to turn it
>> off explicitly would I think be phenomenally useful (which I would promptly
>> add to all my scripted minc* calls). Or even, let output volumes inherit the
>> scaling practice of the input volume(s), like they inherit space variables.
>>
>> Would this be feasible?
>
> If space is cheap then you already have a solution for this, just
> convert all your native datasets to float. This will then mean that
> every bit of processing past this will inherit global scaling.

--
Best regards,

 Vladimir S. Fonov ~ vladimir <dot> fonov <at> gmail <dot> com

On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 3:39 PM, Andrew Janke <a.janke at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Alex,
>
> On 21 March 2013 04:11, Alex Zijdenbos <zijdenbos at gmail.com> wrote:
>> I personally think it would make much more sense to make slice-based scaling
>> the special case, and global scaling the default. In other words, let users
>> turn slice-based scaling on when they have an application that requires it;
>> but keep it off by default. Alternatively, even adding an option to turn it
>> off explicitly would I think be phenomenally useful (which I would promptly
>> add to all my scripted minc* calls). Or even, let output volumes inherit the
>> scaling practice of the input volume(s), like they inherit space variables.
>>
>> Would this be feasible?
>
> If space is cheap then you already have a solution for this, just
> convert all your native datasets to float. This will then mean that
> every bit of processing past this will inherit global scaling.
>
>
> a
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-- 
Best regards,

 Vladimir S. Fonov ~ v.s.fonov <@> ilmarin.info


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