On 2015 Apr 22, Clyde Francks commented:
Study authors Tulio Guadalupe and Clyde Francks reply to comment by Dorothy Bishop:
We thank Dorothy Bishop for insightful comments. We considered the HO measurement of PT grey matter volume as a region-of-interest index 'within and around the human planum temporale', rather than a direct measurement of its neuroanatomical definition. The HO measurement was weighted on the voxels that most probably belonged to the PT, based on 37 brains used in constructing the atlas. The HO definition of PT is lateralized to the left and the measurement of PT regional asymmetry in our datasets reflected this. We agree that this spatial restriction probably contributed to the lower inter-subject variability measured with the HO approach compared to FreeSurfer's parcellations. However, because of the large variability in landmarks in the superior temporal lobe, these regions are among the least reliable in Freesurfer parcellations, and also the Freesurfer-Destrieux definition of the planum temporale includes the planum parietale which is not usually recognized as part of its extent. Reassuringly, we found PT regional lateralization to be sexually dimorphic with both approaches (PT region was the most sexually dimorphic of all 44 regions using the HO atlas and the third most dimorphic of 74 regions using the FreeSurfer-Destrieux atlas). We agree that the measurement issues do not obviously explain the sex effect.
Because of the normalization pre-processing of the GM maps to the MNI template, subjects with departures from average PT lateralization are already somewhat 'pre-fitted' for the HO probabilistic atlas before it is applied (and we saw no major departures based on the random thirty normalized subjects we visually inspected, which would have been expected to contain three or four subjects with rightward PT lateralization). If normalization was perfect, someone with a larger-than-average right PT in relation to that hemisphere would have their right PT morphed into an equivalent normalized space as someone with a smaller than average right PT, prior to atlas application.
Our additional requirement with our HO PT lateralization index was to support genome-wide association meta-analysis across multiple datasets, for which a single and comparable index was required across datasets, after which individual genetic associations would be further interrogated in a voxel-based-morphometry context without use of the HO atlas. We argued that, for measuring group and individual differences, regional identification was likely to be more accurate with an asymmetrical atlas than with a left-right symmetrized atlas, for structures that were asymmetrical both in the atlas and, on average, in our datasets. Using a symmetrized atlas would affect the mean and range of lateralization in the dataset, and probably allow some individuals to be measured with rightward lateralization, but then the fit would be worse for people with leftward lateralization (the majority) than for the un-symmetrized HO atlas.
Genomewide association analysis requires thousands of participants to achieve sufficient statistical power to detect the effects of individual polymorphisms that are individually expected to account for a fraction of 1% of trait variation. Even the sex difference that we found only explained 1.2-1.6% of trait variance. The use of large and multiple datasets was required within a single collaborative study, and the creation of dataset-specific atlases, based on large numbers of participants, by each of the contributing teams matched to their particular scanning setup and population demographic, was not practical. We agree that there is an urgent need for manually created brain atlases based on larger numbers of participants, together with improved methods of automated application that are robust to dataset heterogeneities and flexible for the full range of individual differences.
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