Brain Areas

R Bioinformatics Academia

Looking at the heirarchy of brain areas in the Allen Brain Atlas


Author

Affiliation

Eugene

 

Published

Aug. 13, 2022

Citation

Eugene, 2022


We do a lot of work with data from the Allen Brain Atlas. Frequently, their data is broken down by brain area, with several hundred parts making up our brains. While a map helps a lot to find out where everything goes, I also like to know which areas are substructures of which other areas. It’s always nice to know that the trigeminal nucleus is one part of the Pons for example. So to that end, I built a hierarchy of brain areas in the form of a collapsible tree. I’m still working on preventing overlapping labels, but for the most part is legible, just about, with the right level of zoom.

BrainGrey MatterWhite MatterSulci & Spaces

Next step is to map all these to the beautiful brain atlases produced by Athanasia Mowinckel with the ggseg R package.

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    Text and figures are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0. Source code is available at https://github.com/eugene100hickey/fizzics, unless otherwise noted. The figures that have been reused from other sources don't fall under this license and can be recognized by a note in their caption: "Figure from ...".

    Citation

    For attribution, please cite this work as

    Eugene (2022, Aug. 14). Euge: Brain Areas. Retrieved from https://www.fizzics.ie/posts/2022-08-14-brain-areas/

    BibTeX citation

    @misc{eugene2022brain,
      author = {Eugene, },
      title = {Euge: Brain Areas},
      url = {https://www.fizzics.ie/posts/2022-08-14-brain-areas/},
      year = {2022}
    }