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NHP Interest
The NHP neuroimaging research field and community have expanded rapidly in recent years. There is an immense value in studying the brain structure and function of non-human primate (NHP) brains since NHPs share similar behaviors and underlying neurobiological mechanisms. Comparative studies of human versus non-human primate brains provide important insights about how human-specific functions (e.g. speech and language) evolved through primate evolution and serve to bridge neuroscientific findings between human and non-human primate studies. The study of NHP brain anatomy and function has traditionally been dominated by invasive neurophysiological and post-mortem histological studies. Adding a new dimension to this research, NHP neuroimaging (via MRI) provides a means of studying brain structure , connectivity and function in-vivo and potentially longitudinally. A very recent article by Ellen Neff (2020, Lab Animal, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41684-020-0531-3) beautifully sums up the current state of NHP neuroimaging research. :)
A. Why the interest in NHP neuroimaging?
B. What makes NHP MRI challenging?
C. Typical data analysis challenges
D. Structural data processing steps and PRIME-RE tools
E. Functional data processing steps and PRIME-RE tools
F. Diffusion data processing steps and PRIME-RE tools
G. Cross-species comparisons and PRIME-RE tools