Title of article :
A novel content-based active contour model for brain tumor segmentation
Author/Authors :
Sachdeva، نويسنده , , Jainy and Kumar، نويسنده , , Vinod and Gupta، نويسنده , , Indra and Khandelwal، نويسنده , , Niranjan and Ahuja، نويسنده , , Chirag Kamal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
22
From page :
694
To page :
715
Abstract :
Brain tumor segmentation is a crucial step in surgical and treatment planning. Intensity-based active contour models such as gradient vector flow (GVF), magneto static active contour (MAC) and fluid vector flow (FVF) have been proposed to segment homogeneous objects/tumors in medical images. In this study, extensive experiments are done to analyze the performance of intensity-based techniques for homogeneous tumors on brain magnetic resonance (MR) images. The analysis shows that the state-of-art methods fail to segment homogeneous tumors against similar background or when these tumors show partial diversity toward the background. They also have preconvergence problem in case of false edges/saddle points. However, the presence of weak edges and diffused edges (due to edema around the tumor) leads to oversegmentation by intensity-based techniques. Therefore, the proposed method content-based active contour (CBAC) uses both intensity and texture information present within the active contour to overcome above-stated problems capturing large range in an image. It also proposes a novel use of Gray-Level Co-occurrence Matrix to define texture space for tumor segmentation. The effectiveness of this method is tested on two different real data sets (55 patients — more than 600 images) containing five different types of homogeneous, heterogeneous, diffused tumors and synthetic images (non-MR benchmark images). Remarkable results are obtained in segmenting homogeneous tumors of uniform intensity, complex content heterogeneous, diffused tumors on MR images (T1-weighted, postcontrast T1-weighted and T2-weighted) and synthetic images (non-MR benchmark images of varying intensity, texture, noise content and false edges). Further, tumor volume is efficiently extracted from 2-dimensional slices and is named as 2.5-dimensional segmentation.
Keywords :
Heterogeneous tumors , Brain tumor segmentation , 2.5-dimensional segmentation , Synthetic images , Content-based active contour (CBAC) , Homogeneous tumors
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Record number :
1833309
Link To Document :
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