Unbound MEDLINE

Biases in Measuring the Brain: The Trouble with the Telencephalon. Brain, behavior and evolution [Brain Behav Evol] Journal article

 
TitleBiases in Measuring the Brain: The Trouble with the Telencephalon.
Author(s)Ladage LD, Roth Ii TC, Pravosudov VV 
InstitutionDepartment of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Nev., USA.
SourceBrain Behav Evol 2009 Jun 18; 73(4):253-258.
AbstractWhen correlating behavior with particular brain regions thought responsible for the behavior, a different region of the brain is usually measured as a control region. This technique is often used to relate spatial processes with the hippocampus, while concomitantly controlling for overall brain changes by measuring the remainder of the telencephalon. We have identified two methods in the literature (the HOM and TTM) that estimate the volume of the telencephalon, although the majority of studies are ambiguous regarding the method employed in measuring the telencephalon. Of these two methods, the HOM might produce an artificial correlation between the telencephalon and the hippocampus, and this bias could result in a significant overestimation of the relative hippocampal volume and a significant underestimation of the telencephalon volume, both of which are regularly used in large comparative analyses. We suggest that future studies should avoid this method and all studies should explicitly delineate the procedures used when estimating brain volumes.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19546533
  
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