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1.
Med Image Anal ; 90: 102974, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37774534

ABSTRACT

Reconstructing and segmenting cortical surfaces from MRI is essential to a wide range of brain analyses. However, most approaches follow a multi-step slow process, such as a sequential spherical inflation and registration, which requires considerable computation times. To overcome the limitations arising from these multi-steps, we propose SegRecon, an integrated end-to-end deep learning method to jointly reconstruct and segment cortical surfaces directly from an MRI volume in one single step. We train a volume-based neural network to predict, for each voxel, the signed distances to multiple nested surfaces and their corresponding spherical representation in atlas space. This is, for instance, useful for jointly reconstructing and segmenting the white-to-gray-matter interface and the gray-matter-to-CSF (pial) surface. We evaluate the performance of our surface reconstruction and segmentation method with a comprehensive set of experiments on the MindBoggle, ABIDE and OASIS datasets. Our reconstruction error is found to be less than 0.52 mm and 0.97 mm in terms of average Hausdorff distance to the FreeSurfer generated surfaces. Likewise, the parcellation results show over 4% improvements in average Dice with respect to FreeSurfer, in addition to an observed drastic speed-up from hours to seconds of computation on a standard desktop station.

2.
IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell ; 44(2): 864-876, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33006927

ABSTRACT

Brain surface analysis is essential to neuroscience, however, the complex geometry of the brain cortex hinders computational methods for this task. The difficulty arises from a discrepancy between 3D imaging data, which is represented in Euclidean space, and the non-Euclidean geometry of the highly-convoluted brain surface. Recent advances in machine learning have enabled the use of neural networks for non-Euclidean spaces. These facilitate the learning of surface data, yet pooling strategies often remain constrained to a single fixed-graph. This paper proposes a new learnable graph pooling method for processing multiple surface-valued data to output subject-based information. The proposed method innovates by learning an intrinsic aggregation of graph nodes based on graph spectral embedding. We illustrate the advantages of our approach with in-depth experiments on two large-scale benchmark datasets. The ablation study in the paper illustrates the impact of various factors affecting our learnable pooling method. The flexibility of the pooling strategy is evaluated on four different prediction tasks, namely, subject-sex classification, regression of cortical region sizes, classification of Alzheimer's disease stages, and brain age regression. Our experiments demonstrate the superiority of our learnable pooling approach compared to other pooling techniques for graph convolutional networks, with results improving the state-of-the-art in brain surface analysis.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Alzheimer Disease , Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Machine Learning , Neural Networks, Computer
3.
Med Image Anal ; 54: 297-305, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30974398

ABSTRACT

Neuronal cell bodies mostly reside in the cerebral cortex. The study of this thin and highly convoluted surface is essential for understanding how the brain works. The analysis of surface data is, however, challenging due to the high variability of the cortical geometry. This paper presents a novel approach for learning and exploiting surface data directly across multiple surface domains. Current approaches rely on geometrical simplifications, such as spherical inflations, a popular but costly process. For instance, the widely used FreeSurfer takes about 3 hours to parcellate brain surfaces on a standard machine. Direct learning of surface data via graph convolutions would provide a new family of fast algorithms for processing brain surfaces. However, the current limitation of existing state-of-the-art approaches is their inability to compare surface data across different surface domains. Surface bases are indeed incompatible between brain geometries. This paper leverages recent advances in spectral graph matching to transfer surface data across aligned spectral domains. This novel approach enables direct learning of surface data across compatible surface bases. It exploits spectral filters over intrinsic representations of surface neighborhoods. We illustrate the benefits of this approach with an application to brain parcellation. We validate the algorithm over 101 manually labeled brain surfaces. The results show a significant improvement in labeling accuracy over recent Euclidean approaches while gaining a drastic speed improvement over conventional methods.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Cerebral Cortex/anatomy & histology , Cerebral Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Neuroimaging , Humans
4.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 38(8): 1858-1874, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30835214

ABSTRACT

Retinal swelling due to the accumulation of fluid is associated with the most vision-threatening retinal diseases. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is the current standard of care in assessing the presence and quantity of retinal fluid and image-guided treatment management. Deep learning methods have made their impact across medical imaging, and many retinal OCT analysis methods have been proposed. However, it is currently not clear how successful they are in interpreting the retinal fluid on OCT, which is due to the lack of standardized benchmarks. To address this, we organized a challenge RETOUCH in conjunction with MICCAI 2017, with eight teams participating. The challenge consisted of two tasks: fluid detection and fluid segmentation. It featured for the first time: all three retinal fluid types, with annotated images provided by two clinical centers, which were acquired with the three most common OCT device vendors from patients with two different retinal diseases. The analysis revealed that in the detection task, the performance on the automated fluid detection was within the inter-grader variability. However, in the segmentation task, fusing the automated methods produced segmentations that were superior to all individual methods, indicating the need for further improvements in the segmentation performance.


Subject(s)
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Retina/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, Optical Coherence/methods , Algorithms , Databases, Factual , Humans , Retinal Diseases/diagnostic imaging
5.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 23(1): 273-282, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29994501

ABSTRACT

Automated and accurate segmentation of cystoid structures in optical coherence tomography (OCT) is of interest in the early detection of retinal diseases. It is, however, a challenging task. We propose a novel method for localizing cysts in 3-D OCT volumes. The proposed work is biologically inspired and based on selective enhancement of the cysts, by inducing motion to a given OCT slice. A convolutional neural network is designed to learn a mapping function that combines the result of multiple such motions to produce a probability map for cyst locations in a given slice. The final segmentation of cysts is obtained via simple clustering of the detected cyst locations. The proposed method is evaluated on two public datasets and one private dataset. The public datasets include the one released for the OPTIMA cyst segmentation challenge (OCSC) in MICCAI 2015 and the DME dataset. After training on the OCSC train set, the method achieves a mean dice coefficient (DC) of 0.71 on the OCSC test set. The robustness of the algorithm was examined by cross validation on the DME and AEI (private) datasets and a mean DC values obtained were 0.69 and 0.79, respectively. Overall, the proposed system has the highest performance on all the benchmarks. These results underscore the strengths of the proposed method in handling variations in both data acquisition protocols and scanners.


Subject(s)
Image Enhancement/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Retinal Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, Optical Coherence/methods , Algorithms , Cysts/diagnostic imaging , Databases, Factual , Humans , Neural Networks, Computer , Phantoms, Imaging , Retina/diagnostic imaging
6.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 38(5): 1116-1126, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30387726

ABSTRACT

Recently, dense connections have attracted substantial attention in computer vision because they facilitate gradient flow and implicit deep supervision during training. Particularly, DenseNet that connects each layer to every other layer in a feed-forward fashion and has shown impressive performances in natural image classification tasks. We propose HyperDenseNet, a 3-D fully convolutional neural network that extends the definition of dense connectivity to multi-modal segmentation problems. Each imaging modality has a path, and dense connections occur not only between the pairs of layers within the same path but also between those across different paths. This contrasts with the existing multi-modal CNN approaches, in which modeling several modalities relies entirely on a single joint layer (or level of abstraction) for fusion, typically either at the input or at the output of the network. Therefore, the proposed network has total freedom to learn more complex combinations between the modalities, within and in-between all the levels of abstraction, which increases significantly the learning representation. We report extensive evaluations over two different and highly competitive multi-modal brain tissue segmentation challenges, iSEG 2017 and MRBrainS 2013, with the former focusing on six month infant data and the latter on adult images. HyperDenseNet yielded significant improvements over many state-of-the-art segmentation networks, ranking at the top on both benchmarks. We further provide a comprehensive experimental analysis of features re-use, which confirms the importance of hyper-dense connections in multi-modal representation learning. Our code is publicly available.


Subject(s)
Brain/diagnostic imaging , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Multimodal Imaging
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