1,044 research outputs found
Dilated Convolutional Neural Networks for Cardiovascular MR Segmentation in Congenital Heart Disease
We propose an automatic method using dilated convolutional neural networks
(CNNs) for segmentation of the myocardium and blood pool in cardiovascular MR
(CMR) of patients with congenital heart disease (CHD).
Ten training and ten test CMR scans cropped to an ROI around the heart were
provided in the MICCAI 2016 HVSMR challenge. A dilated CNN with a receptive
field of 131x131 voxels was trained for myocardium and blood pool segmentation
in axial, sagittal and coronal image slices. Performance was evaluated within
the HVSMR challenge.
Automatic segmentation of the test scans resulted in Dice indices of
0.800.06 and 0.930.02, average distances to boundaries of
0.960.31 and 0.890.24 mm, and Hausdorff distances of 6.133.76
and 7.073.01 mm for the myocardium and blood pool, respectively.
Segmentation took 41.514.7 s per scan.
In conclusion, dilated CNNs trained on a small set of CMR images of CHD
patients showing large anatomical variability provide accurate myocardium and
blood pool segmentations
End-to-end learning of brain tissue segmentation from imperfect labeling
Segmenting a structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan is an important
pre-processing step for analytic procedures and subsequent inferences about
longitudinal tissue changes. Manual segmentation defines the current gold
standard in quality but is prohibitively expensive. Automatic approaches are
computationally intensive, incredibly slow at scale, and error prone due to
usually involving many potentially faulty intermediate steps. In order to
streamline the segmentation, we introduce a deep learning model that is based
on volumetric dilated convolutions, subsequently reducing both processing time
and errors. Compared to its competitors, the model has a reduced set of
parameters and thus is easier to train and much faster to execute. The contrast
in performance between the dilated network and its competitors becomes obvious
when both are tested on a large dataset of unprocessed human brain volumes. The
dilated network consistently outperforms not only another state-of-the-art deep
learning approach, the up convolutional network, but also the ground truth on
which it was trained. Not only can the incredible speed of our model make large
scale analyses much easier but we also believe it has great potential in a
clinical setting where, with little to no substantial delay, a patient and
provider can go over test results.Comment: Published as a conference paper at IJCNN 2017 Preprint versio
Automatic Brain Tumor Segmentation using Cascaded Anisotropic Convolutional Neural Networks
A cascade of fully convolutional neural networks is proposed to segment
multi-modal Magnetic Resonance (MR) images with brain tumor into background and
three hierarchical regions: whole tumor, tumor core and enhancing tumor core.
The cascade is designed to decompose the multi-class segmentation problem into
a sequence of three binary segmentation problems according to the subregion
hierarchy. The whole tumor is segmented in the first step and the bounding box
of the result is used for the tumor core segmentation in the second step. The
enhancing tumor core is then segmented based on the bounding box of the tumor
core segmentation result. Our networks consist of multiple layers of
anisotropic and dilated convolution filters, and they are combined with
multi-view fusion to reduce false positives. Residual connections and
multi-scale predictions are employed in these networks to boost the
segmentation performance. Experiments with BraTS 2017 validation set show that
the proposed method achieved average Dice scores of 0.7859, 0.9050, 0.8378 for
enhancing tumor core, whole tumor and tumor core, respectively. The
corresponding values for BraTS 2017 testing set were 0.7831, 0.8739, and
0.7748, respectively.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. MICCAI Brats Challenge 201
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Deep learning for cardiac image segmentation: A review
Deep learning has become the most widely used approach for cardiac image segmentation in recent years. In this paper, we provide a review of over 100 cardiac image segmentation papers using deep learning, which covers common imaging modalities including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), and ultrasound (US) and major anatomical structures of interest (ventricles, atria and vessels). In addition, a summary of publicly available cardiac image datasets and code repositories are included to provide a base for encouraging reproducible research. Finally, we discuss the challenges and limitations with current deep learning-based approaches (scarcity of labels, model generalizability across different domains, interpretability) and suggest potential directions for future research
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