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Patch-based augmentation of Expectation-Maximization for brain MRI tissue segmentation at arbitrary age after premature birth

Authors :
Vann Chau
François Rousseau
Averi E. Kitsch
Colin Studholme
Kenneth J. Poskitt
Mengyuan Liu
Dennis W. W. Shaw
Steven P. Miller
Biomedical Image Computing Group, Department of Pediatrics, Bioengineering and Radiology (University of Washington) (BICG)
Center for Brain and Mental Health (The Hospital for Sick Children)
Department of Pediatrics (University of Toronto)
Department of Pediatrics (University of British Columbia)
Département Image et Traitement Information (ITI)
Université européenne de Bretagne - European University of Brittany (UEB)-Télécom Bretagne-Institut Mines-Télécom [Paris] (IMT)
Laboratoire de Traitement de l'Information Medicale (LaTIM)
Université européenne de Bretagne - European University of Brittany (UEB)-Télécom Bretagne-Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Brest (CHRU Brest)-Université de Brest (UBO)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut Mines-Télécom [Paris] (IMT)
Department of Radiology (Seattle Children's Hospital)
Source :
NeuroImage, NeuroImage, Elsevier, 2016, 127, pp.387-408. ⟨10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.12.009⟩
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2016.

Abstract

International audience; Accurate automated tissue segmentation of premature neonatal magnetic resonance images is a crucial task for quantification of brain injury and its impact on early postnatal growth and later cognitive development. In such studies it is common for scans to be acquired shortly after birth or later during the hospital stay and therefore occur at arbitrary gestational ages during a period of rapid developmental change. It is important to be able to segment any of these scans with comparable accuracy. Previous work on brain tissue segmentation in premature neonates has focused on segmentation at specific ages. Here we look at solving the more general problem using adaptations of age specific atlas based methods and evaluate this using a unique manually traced database of high resolution images spanning 20 gestational weeks of development. We examine the complimentary strengths of age specific atlas-based Expectation-Maximization approaches and patch-based methods for this problem and explore the development of two new hybrid techniques, patch-based augmentation of Expectation-Maximization with weighted fusion and a spatial variability constrained patch search. The former approach seeks to combine the advantages of both atlas- and patch-based methods by learning from the performance of the two techniques across the brain anatomy at different developmental ages, while the latter technique aims to use anatomical variability maps learnt from atlas training data to locally constrain the patch-based search range. The proposed approaches were evaluated using leave-one-out cross-validation. Compared with the conventional age specific atlas-based segmentation and direct patch based segmentation, both new approaches demonstrate improved accuracy in the automated labeling of cortical gray matter, white matter, ventricles and sulcal cortical-spinal fluid regions, while maintaining comparable results in deep gray matter.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10538119 and 10959572
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NeuroImage, NeuroImage, Elsevier, 2016, 127, pp.387-408. ⟨10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.12.009⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb017ba730ec9484d72f7c48378aaad3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.12.009⟩