of binaries and turning it into a well-documented, extensively tested, easy to install and use (relatively!) suite of tools. Andre van der Kouwe has been the key developer of sequences that are optimal with respect to brain morphometry, and more recently M. Dylan Tisdall has worked with Andre to develop structural sequences with embedded real-time motion correction that promise to open up structural imaging to an array of clinical populations that were difficult or impossible to image previously. FreeSurfer has also been blessed with an array of talented, responsible and dedicated research assistants, including Jenni Pacheco, Allison Stevens, Khoa Nguyen, Michelle Roy, Sita Kakunoori, Louis Vinke, Priti Srinivasan, Brian T. Quinn, Maureen Glessner, Evelina Busa, and Niranjini Rajendran. More recently Allison has taken on the larger role of organizing pretty much everything to do with FreeSurfer, including courses, documentation, lab meetings and research projects. Anastasia Yendiki, in collaboration with Tim Behrens and Saad Jbabdi at Oxford, has developed and integrated automated tractography into FreeSurfer (Yendiki et al., 2011), Lilla Zöllei in collaboration with Gheorghe Postelnicu developed a combined volume and surface registration that aligns cortical folding patterns as well as subcortical and ventricular structures (Postelnicu et al., 2009a; Zöllei et