To improve your view of the data, you can change the background color used in the 3-D display, modify the threshold and opacity of the display, and include orientation axes with the display, as shown in the figure below. Add the pu package to the superpackage and distribute it to the hub/robot, and it is placed inside the bin directory. For example, if you have metadata that describes the relative size of the voxels, you can specify it in the Spatial Referencing part of the 3-D Display tab in the app toolstrip. You can also customize the display of the volume in the 3-D Display tab in the app toolstrip. It is guaranteed that the new value does not exist in the original BST. Return the root node of the BST after the insertion. In the 3-D Display pane, you can rotate the volume to examine the data from every angle, using the mouse. Given the root node of a binary search tree (BST) and a value to be inserted into the tree, insert the value into the BST. To determine what you want to segment, explore the volume using the 3-D Display pane and the Slice pane. You can optionally load an existing set of labels into the app using the Open Labels button.
To change the color associated with the label, double-click the color square displayed in the Labels pane. To change the name of the label, double-click the label name. However, to create a binary mask, you must use only one label. You can define multiple labels in the Labels pane. The app also automatically creates a label for the segmentation in the Labels pane, using the default name Label1. In this dataset, the first few slices do not contain images of the brain. The app displays the number of the slice displayed at the top of the image, for example, 1/155. By default, the Slice pane displays the first slice of your data.