FreeSurfer Tutorial and Workshop

April 6 & 7, 2009

Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging

149 Thirteenth Street, Charlestown, MA 02129

Click here to register!


The FreeSurfer Development Team is hosting a two-day course for beginner and experienced users of FreeSurfer. Day 1 will be an introduction to FreeSurfer (or a refresher for those more experienced). Day 2 will cover everything you need to know for analyzing your data. Topics are listed below. The two days will roughly run from 8:30am-6pm. Registration deadline is March 20, 2009. There are only 34 available spots for this course.

Laptops will be provided to the first 12 pairs of registrants, which will have FreeSurfer and data already installed. Attendees will work in pairs (sharing a laptop). For the additional 10 pairs of registrants, you must bring your own laptop, and you must install FreeSurfer and tutorial data on it and test it ahead of time. There will be time at the end of Day 1 to learn how to install FreeSurfer but please keep in mind that there might not be enough time to resolve any specific technical issues that may arise.

The course will be held at the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging in Boston.

Schedule

Day 1: Introduction to FreeSurfer

Day 2: Advanced FreeSurfer: Working with Various Data Types

Lecturers and Staff

Accomodations

We encourage attendees to stay at either of these two locations:

A block of rooms are reserved at $99/night. To request this block, ask for the FreeSurfer block.

Directions

The FreeSurfer Course is being held at:

Conference Room A is closest to the 9th Street Entrance.

If you are coming by T, there is a shuttle bus that picks up at North Station (across from TD Banknorth Garden). The schedule is here: http://www.partners.org/ourhosp/shuttleschedule/mgh_cny.html

From North Station, you want to look at the side that says Arrive/Depart MGH Main Campus. It comes every 15 minutes and it takes about 5 minutes for it to get to North Station from the Main Campus. You want to get off at Building 149 (usually the third stop).