“…The mean habenula volumes measured by manual contrast‐based segmentation at 3T were 18.8/16.4 mm 3 (Savitz et al, ), 19.5/17.9 mm 3 (Savitz et al, ), left/right habenula respectively, and 43.0 mm 3 (Carceller‐Sindreu et al, ), bilateral, while those from 7T T1 map were 17.6/17.3 mm 3 (Schmidt et al, ), left/right habenula respectively in healthy controls. Using the geometric segmentation (i.e., Lawson's method), the habenula volumes from 3T were 27.9/28.0 mm 3 (Hétu et al, ), 28.3/28.7 mm 3 (Furman & Gotlib, ), 29.4/29.3 mm 3 (Lawson et al, ), left/right habenula respectively, and 22.3 mm 3 (Lawson et al, ) per hemisphere, while those from 7T (0.7 mm isotropic resolution MPRAGE) were 18.8/14.9 mm 3 (Torrisi et al, ), left/right habenula respectively. Assessing the accuracy of in vivo habenula segmentation would require a carefully planned cadaver MRI, ex vivo MRI, and histology from the same brain, which is beyond the scope of this study.…”