| Literature DB >> 27563289 |
Robert D Vincent1, Peter Neelin2, Najmeh Khalili-Mahani1, Andrew L Janke3, Vladimir S Fonov1, Steven M Robbins1, Leila Baghdadi4, Jason Lerch5, John G Sled5, Reza Adalat1, David MacDonald6, Alex P Zijdenbos7, D Louis Collins8, Alan C Evans1.
Abstract
It is often useful that an imaging data format can afford rich metadata, be flexible, scale to very large file sizes, support multi-modal data, and have strong inbuilt mechanisms for data provenance. Beginning in 1992, MINC was developed as a system for flexible, self-documenting representation of neuroscientific imaging data with arbitrary orientation and dimensionality. The MINC system incorporates three broad components: a file format specification, a programming library, and a growing set of tools. In the early 2000's the MINC developers created MINC 2.0, which added support for 64-bit file sizes, internal compression, and a number of other modern features. Because of its extensible design, it has been easy to incorporate details of provenance in the header metadata, including an explicit processing history, unique identifiers, and vendor-specific scanner settings. This makes MINC ideal for use in large scale imaging studies and databases. It also makes it easy to adapt to new scanning sequences and modalities.Entities:
Keywords: HDF5; data format; data management; metadata; neuroimaging; provenance
Year: 2016 PMID: 27563289 PMCID: PMC4980430 DOI: 10.3389/fninf.2016.00035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroinform ISSN: 1662-5196 Impact factor: 4.081
Brief summary of the characteristics of MINC and some other neuroinformatics data formats.
| ACR-NEMA | 1985 | Typically many | High | Low | Low |
| Analyze 7.5 | 1986 | Two | Low | Low | Low |
| DICOM | 1992 | Typically many | High | Low | Low |
| MINC | 1992 | One | High | High | High |
| NIfTI-1 | 2001 | One | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
Figure 1Implementation of MINC 2.0 in HDF5, illustrating the hierarchical structure. HDF5 groups have names in boldface, attributes are indicated with ellipses. Other rectangles indicate HDF5 datasets.
Figure 2Voxel vs. world coordinates. Each grid square represents a single sample in the voxel space of the image. The voxel origin (0,0) would be in the upper left corner of the image. The world Y and Z directions are rotated 20⋅ relative to the voxel coordinates. The origin of the world coordinate system would be defined with respect to some anatomical landmark.