29 research outputs found
Self-Supervised Discovery of Anatomical Shape Landmarks
Statistical shape analysis is a very useful tool in a wide range of medical
and biological applications. However, it typically relies on the ability to
produce a relatively small number of features that can capture the relevant
variability in a population. State-of-the-art methods for obtaining such
anatomical features rely on either extensive preprocessing or segmentation
and/or significant tuning and post-processing. These shortcomings limit the
widespread use of shape statistics. We propose that effective shape
representations should provide sufficient information to align/register images.
Using this assumption we propose a self-supervised, neural network approach for
automatically positioning and detecting landmarks in images that can be used
for subsequent analysis. The network discovers the landmarks corresponding to
anatomical shape features that promote good image registration in the context
of a particular class of transformations. In addition, we also propose a
regularization for the proposed network which allows for a uniform distribution
of these discovered landmarks. In this paper, we present a complete framework,
which only takes a set of input images and produces landmarks that are
immediately usable for statistical shape analysis. We evaluate the performance
on a phantom dataset as well as 2D and 3D images.Comment: Early accept at MICCAI 202
Noise-processing by signaling networks
Signaling networks mediate environmental information to the cell nucleus. To perform this task effectively they must be able to integrate multiple stimuli and distinguish persistent signals from transient environmental fluctuations. However, the ways in which signaling networks process environmental noise are not well understood. Here we outline a mathematical framework that relates a network’s structure to its capacity to process noise, and use this framework to dissect the noise-processing ability of signaling networks. We find that complex networks that are dense in directed paths are poor noise processors, while those that are sparse and strongly directional process noise well. These results suggest that while cross-talk between signaling pathways may increase the ability of signaling networks to integrate multiple stimuli, too much cross-talk may compromise the ability of the network to distinguish signal from noise. To illustrate these general results we consider the structure of the signalling network that maintains pluripotency in mouse embryonic stem cells, and find an incoherent feedforward loop structure involving Stat3, Tfcp2l1, Esrrb, Klf2 and Klf4 is particularly important for noise-processing. Taken together these results suggest that noise-processing is an important function of signaling networks and they may be structured in part to optimize this task
Gene Expression High-Dimensional Clustering towards a Novel, Robust, Clinically Relevant and Highly Compact Cancer Signature
International audiencePrecision medicine, a highly disruptive paradigm shift in healthcare targeting the personalizing treatment, heavily relies on genomic data. However, the complexity of the biological interactions, the important number of genes as well as the lack of substantial patient's clinical data consist a tremendous bottleneck on the clinical implementation of precision medicine. In this work, we introduce a generic, low dimensional gene signature that represents adequately the tumor type. Our gene signature is produced using LP-stability algorithm, a high dimensional center-based unsupervised clustering algorithm working in the dual domain, and is very versatile as it can consider any arbitrary distance metric between genes. The gene signature produced by LP-stability reports at least times better statistical significance and better biological significance than the ones produced by two referential unsupervised clustering methods. Moreover, our experiments demonstrate that our low dimensional biomarker ( genes) surpass significantly existing state of the art methods both in terms of qualitative and quantitative assessment while providing better associations to tumor types than methods widely used in the literature that rely on several omics data