744 research outputs found
Computerized Analysis of Magnetic Resonance Images to Study Cerebral Anatomy in Developing Neonates
The study of cerebral anatomy in developing neonates is of great importance for
the understanding of brain development during the early period of life. This
dissertation therefore focuses on three challenges in the modelling of cerebral
anatomy in neonates during brain development. The methods that have been
developed all use Magnetic Resonance Images (MRI) as source data.
To facilitate study of vascular development in the neonatal period, a set of image
analysis algorithms are developed to automatically extract and model cerebral
vessel trees. The whole process consists of cerebral vessel tracking from
automatically placed seed points, vessel tree generation, and vasculature
registration and matching. These algorithms have been tested on clinical Time-of-
Flight (TOF) MR angiographic datasets.
To facilitate study of the neonatal cortex a complete cerebral cortex segmentation
and reconstruction pipeline has been developed. Segmentation of the neonatal
cortex is not effectively done by existing algorithms designed for the adult brain
because the contrast between grey and white matter is reversed. This causes pixels
containing tissue mixtures to be incorrectly labelled by conventional methods. The
neonatal cortical segmentation method that has been developed is based on a novel
expectation-maximization (EM) method with explicit correction for mislabelled
partial volume voxels. Based on the resulting cortical segmentation, an implicit
surface evolution technique is adopted for the reconstruction of the cortex in
neonates. The performance of the method is investigated by performing a detailed
landmark study.
To facilitate study of cortical development, a cortical surface registration algorithm
for aligning the cortical surface is developed. The method first inflates extracted
cortical surfaces and then performs a non-rigid surface registration using free-form
deformations (FFDs) to remove residual alignment. Validation experiments using
data labelled by an expert observer demonstrate that the method can capture local
changes and follow the growth of specific sulcus
Infant Brain Atlases from Neonates to 1- and 2-Year-Olds
Background: Studies for infants are usually hindered by the insufficient image contrast, especially for neonates. Prior knowledge, in the form of atlas, can provide additional guidance for the data processing such as spatial normalization, label propagation, and tissue segmentation. Although it is highly desired, there is currently no such infant atlas which caters for all these applications. The reason may be largely due to the dramatic early brain development, image processing difficulties, and the need of a large sample size. Methodology: To this end, after several years of subject recruitment and data acquisition, we have collected a unique longitudinal dataset, involving 95 normal infants (56 males and 39 females) with MRI scanned at 3 ages, i.e., neonate, 1-yearold, and 2-year-old. State-of-the-art MR image segmentation and registration techniques were employed, to construct which include the templates (grayscale average images), tissue probability maps (TPMs), and brain parcellation maps (i.e., meaningful anatomical regions of interest) for each age group. In addition, the longitudinal correspondences between agespecific atlases were also obtained. Experiments of typical infant applications validated that the proposed atlas outperformed other atlases and is hence very useful for infant-related studies. Conclusions: We expect that the proposed infant 0–1–2 brain atlases would be significantly conducive to structural and functional studies of the infant brains. These atlases are publicly available in our website
A SURVEY ON IMAGE SEGMENTATION USING DECISION FUSION METHOD
Neonatal brain MRI segmentation is challenging due to the poor image quality. Existing population atlases used for guiding segmentation are usually constructed by averaging all images in a population with no preference. However, such approaches diminish the important local inter-subject structural variability. Tissue segmentation of neonatal brain MR images remains challenging because of the insufficient image quality due to the properties of developing tissues. Among various brain tissue segmentation algorithms, atlas-based brain image segmentation can potentially achieve good segmentation results on neonatal brain images. Atlas-based segmentation approaches have been widely used for guiding brain tissue segmentation. Existing brain atlases are usually constructed by equally averaging presegmented images in a population. However, such approaches diminish local inter-subject structural variability and thus lead to lower segmentation guidance capability. To deal with this problem, we propose a multi-region-multi-reference framework for atlas-based neonatal brain segmentation
Automatic segmentation of MR brain images with a convolutional neural network
Automatic segmentation in MR brain images is important for quantitative
analysis in large-scale studies with images acquired at all ages.
This paper presents a method for the automatic segmentation of MR brain
images into a number of tissue classes using a convolutional neural network. To
ensure that the method obtains accurate segmentation details as well as spatial
consistency, the network uses multiple patch sizes and multiple convolution
kernel sizes to acquire multi-scale information about each voxel. The method is
not dependent on explicit features, but learns to recognise the information
that is important for the classification based on training data. The method
requires a single anatomical MR image only.
The segmentation method is applied to five different data sets: coronal
T2-weighted images of preterm infants acquired at 30 weeks postmenstrual age
(PMA) and 40 weeks PMA, axial T2- weighted images of preterm infants acquired
at 40 weeks PMA, axial T1-weighted images of ageing adults acquired at an
average age of 70 years, and T1-weighted images of young adults acquired at an
average age of 23 years. The method obtained the following average Dice
coefficients over all segmented tissue classes for each data set, respectively:
0.87, 0.82, 0.84, 0.86 and 0.91.
The results demonstrate that the method obtains accurate segmentations in all
five sets, and hence demonstrates its robustness to differences in age and
acquisition protocol
Recommended from our members
A normative spatiotemporal MRI atlas of the fetal brain for automatic segmentation and analysis of early brain growth.
Longitudinal characterization of early brain growth in-utero has been limited by a number of challenges in fetal imaging, the rapid change in size, shape and volume of the developing brain, and the consequent lack of suitable algorithms for fetal brain image analysis. There is a need for an improved digital brain atlas of the spatiotemporal maturation of the fetal brain extending over the key developmental periods. We have developed an algorithm for construction of an unbiased four-dimensional atlas of the developing fetal brain by integrating symmetric diffeomorphic deformable registration in space with kernel regression in age. We applied this new algorithm to construct a spatiotemporal atlas from MRI of 81 normal fetuses scanned between 19 and 39 weeks of gestation and labeled the structures of the developing brain. We evaluated the use of this atlas and additional individual fetal brain MRI atlases for completely automatic multi-atlas segmentation of fetal brain MRI. The atlas is available online as a reference for anatomy and for registration and segmentation, to aid in connectivity analysis, and for groupwise and longitudinal analysis of early brain growth
Cortical enhanced tissue segmentation of neonatal brain MR images acquired by a dedicated phased array coil
pre-printThe acquisition of high quality MR images of neonatal brains is largely hampered by their characteristically small head size and low tissue contrast. As a result, subsequent image processing and analysis, especially for brain tissue segmentation, are often hindered. To overcome this problem, a dedicated phased array neonatal head coil is utilized to improve MR image quality by effectively combing images obtained from 8 coil elements without lengthening data acquisition time. In addition, a subject-specific atlas based tissue segmentation algorithm is specifically developed for the delineation of fine structures in the acquired neonatal brain MR images. The proposed tissue segmentation method first enhances the sheet-like cortical gray matter (GM) structures in neonatal images with a Hessian filter for generation of cortical GM prior. Then, the prior is combined with our neonatal population atlas to form a cortical enhanced hybrid atlas, which we refer to as the subject-specific atlas. Various experiments are conducted to compare the proposed method with manual segmentation results, as well as with additional two population atlas based segmentation methods. Results show that the proposed method is capable of segmenting the neonatal brain with the highest accuracy, compared to other two methods
Segmentation of brain MRI during early childhood
The objective of this thesis is the development of automatic methods to measure the changes in
volume and growth of brain structures in prematurely born infants. Automatic tools for accurate
tissue quantification from magnetic resonance images can provide means for understanding
how the neurodevelopmental effects of the premature birth, such as cognitive, neurological or
behavioural impairment, are related to underlying changes in brain anatomy. Understanding
these changes forms a basis for development of suitable treatments to improve the outcomes of
premature birth.
In this thesis we focus on the segmentation of brain structures from magnetic resonance images
during early childhood. Most of the current brain segmentation techniques have been focused
on the segmentation of adult or neonatal brains. As a result of rapid development, the brain
anatomy during early childhood differs from anatomy of both adult and neonatal brains and
therefore requires adaptations of available techniques to produce good results.
To address the issue of anatomical differences of the brain during early childhood compared
to other age-groups, population-specific deformable and probabilistic atlases are introduced. A
method for generation of population-specific prior information in form of a probabilistic atlas
is proposed and used to enhance existing segmentation algorithms.
The evaluation of registration-based and intensity-based approaches shows the techniques to
be complementary in the quality of automatic segmentation in different parts of the brain. We
propose a novel robust segmentation method combining the advantages of both approaches. The
method is based on multiple label propagation using B-spline non-rigid registration followed by
EM segmentation.
Intensity inhomogeneity is a shading artefact resulting from the acquisition process, which
significantly affects modern high resolution MR data acquired at higher magnetic field strengths.
A novel template based method focused on correcting the intensity inhomogeneity in data
acquired at higher magnetic field strengths is therefore proposed.
The proposed segmentation method combined with proposed intensity inhomogeneity correction
method offers a robust tool for quantification of volumes and growth of brain structures during
early childhood. The tool have been applied to 67 T1-weigted images of subject at one and two years of age
Image registration driven by combined probabilistic and geometric descriptors
pre-printDeformable image registration in the presence of considerable contrast dierences and large-scale size and shape changes represents a signicant challenge for image registration. A representative driving application is the study of early brain development in neuroimaging, which requires co-registration of images of the same subject across time or building 4-D population atlases. Growth during the first few years of development involves significant changes in size and shape of anatomical structures but also rapid changes in tissue properties due to myeli-nation and structuring that are reflected in the multi-modal Magnetic Resonance (MR) contrast measurements. We propose a new registration method that generates a mapping between brain anatomies represented as a multi-compartment model of tissue class posterior images and geometries. We transform intensity patterns into combined probabilistic and geometric descriptors that drive the matching in a diffeomorphic framework, where distances between geometries are represented using currents which does not require geometric correspondence. We show preliminary results on the registrations of neonatal brain MRIs to two-year old infant MRIs using class posteriors and surface boundaries of structures undergoing major changes. Quantitative validation demonstrates that our proposed method generates registrations that better preserve the consistency of anatomical structures over time
- …