12,238 research outputs found
3-D Face Analysis and Identification Based on Statistical Shape Modelling
This paper presents an effective method of statistical shape representation for automatic face analysis and identification in 3-D. The method combines statistical shape modelling techniques and the non-rigid deformation matching scheme. This work is distinguished by three key contributions. The first is the introduction of a new 3-D shape registration method using hierarchical landmark detection and multilevel B-spline warping technique, which allows accurate dense correspondence search for statistical model construction. The second is the shape representation approach, based on Laplacian Eigenmap, which provides a nonlinear submanifold that links underlying structure of facial data. The third contribution is a hybrid method for matching the statistical model and test dataset which controls the levels of the model’s deformation at different matching stages and so increases chance of the successful matching. The proposed method is tested on the public database, BU-3DFE. Results indicate that it can achieve extremely high verification rates in a series of tests, thus providing real-world practicality
A stochastic large deformation model for computational anatomy
In the study of shapes of human organs using computational anatomy, variations are found to arise from inter-subject anatomical differences, disease-specific effects, and measurement noise. This paper introduces a stochastic model for incorporating random variations into the Large Deformation Diffeomorphic Metric Mapping (LDDMM) framework. By accounting for randomness in a particular setup which is crafted to fit the geometrical properties of LDDMM, we formulate the template estimation problem for landmarks with noise and give two methods for efficiently estimating the parameters of the noise fields from a prescribed data set. One method directly approximates the time evolution of the variance of each landmark by a finite set of differential equations, and the other is based on an Expectation-Maximisation algorithm. In the second method, the evaluation of the data likelihood is achieved without registering the landmarks, by applying bridge sampling using a stochastically perturbed version of the large deformation gradient flow algorithm. The method and the estimation algorithms are experimentally validated on synthetic examples and shape data of human corpora callosa
Bridge Simulation and Metric Estimation on Landmark Manifolds
We present an inference algorithm and connected Monte Carlo based estimation
procedures for metric estimation from landmark configurations distributed
according to the transition distribution of a Riemannian Brownian motion
arising from the Large Deformation Diffeomorphic Metric Mapping (LDDMM) metric.
The distribution possesses properties similar to the regular Euclidean normal
distribution but its transition density is governed by a high-dimensional PDE
with no closed-form solution in the nonlinear case. We show how the density can
be numerically approximated by Monte Carlo sampling of conditioned Brownian
bridges, and we use this to estimate parameters of the LDDMM kernel and thus
the metric structure by maximum likelihood
Atlas-Based Prostate Segmentation Using an Hybrid Registration
Purpose: This paper presents the preliminary results of a semi-automatic
method for prostate segmentation of Magnetic Resonance Images (MRI) which aims
to be incorporated in a navigation system for prostate brachytherapy. Methods:
The method is based on the registration of an anatomical atlas computed from a
population of 18 MRI exams onto a patient image. An hybrid registration
framework which couples an intensity-based registration with a robust
point-matching algorithm is used for both atlas building and atlas
registration. Results: The method has been validated on the same dataset that
the one used to construct the atlas using the "leave-one-out method". Results
gives a mean error of 3.39 mm and a standard deviation of 1.95 mm with respect
to expert segmentations. Conclusions: We think that this segmentation tool may
be a very valuable help to the clinician for routine quantitative image
exploitation.Comment: International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery
(2008) 000-99
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