50 research outputs found
Longitudinal analysis of the preterm cortex using multi-modal spectral matching
Extremely preterm birth (less than 32 weeks completed gestation) overlaps with a period of rapid brain growth and development. Investigating longitudinal brain changes over the preterm period in these infants may allow the development of biomarkers for predicting neurological outcome. In this paper we investigate longitudinal changes in cortical thickness,cortical fractional anisotropy and cortical mean diffusivity in a groupwise space obtained using a novel multi-modal spectral matching technique. The novelty of this method consists in its ability to register surfaces with very little shape complexity,like in the case of the early developmental stages of preterm infants,by also taking into account their underlying biology. A multi-modal method also allows us to investigate interdependencies between the parameters. Such tools have great potential in investigating in depth the regions affected by preterm birth and how they relate to each other
Investigating Intra-Individual Networks of Response Inhibition and Interference Resolution using 7T MRI
Response inhibition and interference resolution are often considered subcomponents of an overarching inhibition system that utilizes the so-called cortico-basal-ganglia loop. Up until now, most previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) literature has compared the two using between-subject designs, pooling data in the form of a meta-analysis or comparing different groups. Here, we investigate the overlap of activation patterns underlying response inhibition and interference resolution on a within-subject level, using ultra-high field MRI. In this model-based study, we furthered the functional analysis with cognitive modelling techniques to provide a more in-depth understanding of behaviour. We applied the stop-signal task and multi-source interference task to measure response inhibition and interference resolution, respectively. Our results lead us to conclude that these constructs are rooted in anatomically distinct brain areas and provide little evidence for spatial overlap. Across the two tasks, common BOLD responses were observed in the inferior frontal gyrus and anterior insula. Interference resolution relied more heavily on subcortical components, specifically nodes of the commonly referred to indirect and hyperdirect pathways, as well as the anterior cingulate cortex, and pre-supplementary motor area. Our data indicated that orbitofrontal cortex activation is specific to response inhibition. Our model-based approach provided evidence for the dissimilarity in behavioural dynamics between the two tasks. The current work exemplifies the importance of reducing inter-individual variance when comparing network patterns and the value of UHF-MRI for high resolution functional mapping
Topology-preserving augmentation for cnn-based segmentation of congenital heart defects from 3d paediatric cmr
Patient-specific 3D printing of congenital heart anatomy demands an accurate
segmentation of the thin tissue interfaces which characterise these diagnoses.
Even when a label set has a high spatial overlap with the ground truth,
inaccurate delineation of these interfaces can result in topological errors.
These compromise the clinical utility of such models due to the anomalous
appearance of defects. CNNs have achieved state-of-the-art performance in
segmentation tasks. Whilst data augmentation has often played an important
role, we show that conventional image resampling schemes used therein can
introduce topological changes in the ground truth labelling of augmented
samples. We present a novel pipeline to correct for these changes, using a
fast-marching algorithm to enforce the topology of the ground truth labels
within their augmented representations. In so doing, we invoke the idea of
cardiac contiguous topology to describe an arbitrary combination of congenital
heart defects and develop an associated, clinically meaningful metric to
measure the topological correctness of segmentations. In a series of five-fold
cross-validations, we demonstrate the performance gain produced by this
pipeline and the relevance of topological considerations to the segmentation of
congenital heart defects. We speculate as to the applicability of this approach
to any segmentation task involving morphologically complex targets.Comment: To be published at MICCAI PIPPI 201
Rigid motions in the cubic grid: A discussion on topological issues
International audienceRigid motions on 2D digital images were recently investigated with the purpose of preserving geometric and topological properties. From the application point of view, such properties are crucial in image processing tasks, for instance image registration. The known ideas behind preserving geometry and topology rely on connections between the 2D continuous and 2D digital geometries that were established via multiple notions of regularity on digital and continuous sets. We start by recalling these results; then we discuss the difficulties that arise when extending them from to . On the one hand, we aim to provide a discussion on strategies that proved to be successful in and remain valid in ; on the other hand, we explain why certain strategies cannot be extended to the 3D framework of digitized rigid motions. We also emphasize the relationships that may exist between certain concepts initially proposed in . Overall, our objective is to initiate an investigation about the most promising approaches for extending the 2D results to higher dimensions