20,144 research outputs found
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The role of HG in the analysis of temporal iteration and interaural correlation
Multiple Shape Registration using Constrained Optimal Control
Lagrangian particle formulations of the large deformation diffeomorphic
metric mapping algorithm (LDDMM) only allow for the study of a single shape. In
this paper, we introduce and discuss both a theoretical and practical setting
for the simultaneous study of multiple shapes that are either stitched to one
another or slide along a submanifold. The method is described within the
optimal control formalism, and optimality conditions are given, together with
the equations that are needed to implement augmented Lagrangian methods.
Experimental results are provided for stitched and sliding surfaces
Coupled non-parametric shape and moment-based inter-shape pose priors for multiple basal ganglia structure segmentation
This paper presents a new active contour-based, statistical method for simultaneous volumetric segmentation of multiple subcortical structures in the brain. In biological tissues, such as the human brain, neighboring structures exhibit co-dependencies which can aid in segmentation, if properly analyzed and modeled. Motivated by this observation, we formulate the segmentation problem as a maximum a posteriori estimation problem, in which we incorporate statistical prior models on the shapes and inter-shape (relative) poses of the structures of interest. This provides a principled mechanism to bring high level information about the shapes and the relationships of anatomical structures into the segmentation problem. For learning the prior densities we use a nonparametric multivariate kernel density estimation framework. We combine these priors with data in a variational framework and develop an active contour-based iterative segmentation algorithm.
We test our method on the problem of volumetric segmentation of basal ganglia structures in magnetic resonance (MR) images.
We present a set of 2D and 3D experiments as well as a quantitative performance analysis. In addition, we perform a comparison to several existent segmentation methods and demonstrate the improvements provided by our approach in terms of segmentation accuracy
Optical techniques for 3D surface reconstruction in computer-assisted laparoscopic surgery
One of the main challenges for computer-assisted surgery (CAS) is to determine the intra-opera- tive morphology and motion of soft-tissues. This information is prerequisite to the registration of multi-modal patient-specific data for enhancing the surgeon’s navigation capabilites by observ- ing beyond exposed tissue surfaces and for providing intelligent control of robotic-assisted in- struments. In minimally invasive surgery (MIS), optical techniques are an increasingly attractive approach for in vivo 3D reconstruction of the soft-tissue surface geometry. This paper reviews the state-of-the-art methods for optical intra-operative 3D reconstruction in laparoscopic surgery and discusses the technical challenges and future perspectives towards clinical translation. With the recent paradigm shift of surgical practice towards MIS and new developments in 3D opti- cal imaging, this is a timely discussion about technologies that could facilitate complex CAS procedures in dynamic and deformable anatomical regions
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State of the Art of Level Set Methods in Segmentation and Registration of Medical Imaging Modalities
Segmentation of medical images is an important step in various applications such as visualization, quantitative analysis and image-guided surgery. Numerous segmentation methods have been developed in the past two decades for extraction of organ contours on medical images. Low-level segmentation methods, such as pixel-based clustering, region growing, and filter-based edge detection, require additional pre-processing and post-processing as well as considerable amounts of expert intervention or information of the objects of interest. Furthermore the subsequent analysis of segmented objects is hampered by the primitive, pixel or voxel level representations from those region-based segmentation. Deformable models, on the other hand, provide an explicit representation of the boundary and the shape of the object. They combine several desirable features such as inherent connectivity and smoothness, which counteract noise and boundary irregularities, as well as the ability to incorporate knowledge about the object of interest. However, parametric deformable models have two main limitations. First, in situations where the initial model and desired object boundary differ greatly in size and shape, the model must be re-parameterized dynamically to faithfully recover the object boundary. The second limitation is that it has difficulty dealing with topological adaptation such as splitting or merging model parts, a useful property for recovering either multiple objects or objects with unknown topology. This difficulty is caused by the fact that a new parameterization must be constructed whenever topology change occurs, which requires sophisticated schemes. Level set deformable models, also referred to as geometric deformable models, provide an elegant solution to address the primary limitations of parametric deformable models. These methods have drawn a great deal of attention since their introduction in 1988. Advantages of the contour implicit formulation of the deformable model over parametric formulation include: (1) no parameterization of the contour, (2) topological flexibility, (3) good numerical stability, (4) straightforward extension of the 2D formulation to n-D. Recent reviews on the subject include papers from Suri. In this chapter we give a general overview of the level set segmentation methods with emphasize on new frameworks recently introduced in the context of medical imaging problems. We then introduce novel approaches that aim at combining segmentation and registration in a level set formulation. Finally we review a selective set of clinical works with detailed validation of the level set methods for several clinical applications
Unified Heat Kernel Regression for Diffusion, Kernel Smoothing and Wavelets on Manifolds and Its Application to Mandible Growth Modeling in CT Images
We present a novel kernel regression framework for smoothing scalar surface
data using the Laplace-Beltrami eigenfunctions. Starting with the heat kernel
constructed from the eigenfunctions, we formulate a new bivariate kernel
regression framework as a weighted eigenfunction expansion with the heat kernel
as the weights. The new kernel regression is mathematically equivalent to
isotropic heat diffusion, kernel smoothing and recently popular diffusion
wavelets. Unlike many previous partial differential equation based approaches
involving diffusion, our approach represents the solution of diffusion
analytically, reducing numerical inaccuracy and slow convergence. The numerical
implementation is validated on a unit sphere using spherical harmonics. As an
illustration, we have applied the method in characterizing the localized growth
pattern of mandible surfaces obtained in CT images from subjects between ages 0
and 20 years by regressing the length of displacement vectors with respect to
the template surface.Comment: Accepted in Medical Image Analysi
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