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Virtual / anatomical regions |
Use to obtain the quantity of objects or the total length within shells. The Sholl analysis can be performed on the trees or markers on the trees.
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A shell is the volume contained out to the given radius, but does not include the volume of any smaller shells. This means that the smallest radius row is a sphere of the given radius.
The Sholl Analysis generates a set of nested concentric spheres centered at the cell body. The smallest sphere has a radius of 0. The spheres increase in size by a constant change in radius (r) that you determine. Neurolucida Explorer determines the largest sphere so that it is large enough to enclose everything being counted.
The center point of the Sholl analysis is the center of the cell body. The center is found by examining all of the cell bodies and finding the centroid of each. The average of all of the centroids is then used as the center point.
The centroid is the balance point. Imagine placing a pencil point at the centroid; the cell body tracing would balance on the pencil tip. If the cell body has been traced at several different focal planes, several centroids are calculated. The average of the centroids is the average of each coordinate.
To hide the Sholl spheres, use Display>Remove Sholl Spheres.
Each radius corresponds to a shell.
Number of intersections between process and sphere at the given radius.
Total length of all processes passing through a shell.
Reports the length of the processes for each shell by branch order.
Displays the number of markers in each shell (represented by the radius) for each marker type.
Neurolucida Explorer 11 | MBF Science Support Center | Downloads![]()