Connectivity Assay >

3. Trace your region(s) of interest

Procedure

Serial Section

Working on: Select the section the drop-down menu.

  • Edit section: Click to edit information about the section selected in the Working on drop-down menu.

Trace your Region(s) of Interest on the Current Slide

  1. Select a contour type from Contour drop-down menu.

    To adjust contour settings, such as name and color, click the cog icon to open the Contour Settings window (equivalent to opening contour preferences from the File menu).

    You may want to name contours for the area(s) of interest in which you are counting and change colors to maximize visibility.

  2. Focus through the section as needed. The current section is indicated in green in the Z-meter.
  3. Trace a contour to delineate a region of interest (use the same contour type for the same region of interest in subsequent sections). Right-click and choose Close contour to complete your contour(s). Do not use open contours.

If you are using different contours for different anatomical regions within the same animal (e.g., ipsilateral and contralateral striatum), you can always combine these two regions in the analysis if desired, as long as they have been counted with the same sampling parameters.

Tracing Options

You can change the size of the AutoMove box by clicking the cog icon in the Tools section of the Move ribbon to open movement preferences.

Tracing methods: Choose your preferred contour tracing method. Note that you can change the method while you are tracing by right clicking and selecting a different method from the right-click menu:

  • Simple click: Click to place a point, move the cursor to a new position then click again to draw a line segment between the two points. Continue to place points that delineate the region of interest.
  • Rubber line: Similar to simple click tracing; as you move the cursor to a new position, a "rubber line" is drawn from the last point you placed to your current cursor position.
  • Continuous Line: Trace by clicking and dragging the mouse.