Author :
Hosseini, Mohammad-Parsa ; Nazem-Zadeh, Mohammad R. ; Pompili, Dario ; Soltanian-Zadeh, Hamid
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ, USA
Abstract :
Hippocampus segmentation is a key step in the evaluation of mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (mTLE) by MR images. Several automated segmentation methods have been introduced for medical image segmentation. Because of multiple edges, missing boundaries, and shape changing along its longitudinal axis, manual outlining still remains the benchmark for hippocampus segmentation, which however, is impractical for large datasets due to time constraints. In this study, four automatic methods, namely FreeSurfer, Hammer, Automatic Brain Structure Segmentation (ABSS), and LocalInfo segmentation, are evaluated to find the most accurate and applicable method that resembles the bench-mark of hippocampus. Results from these four methods are compared against those obtained using manual segmentation for T1-weighted images of 157 symptomatic mTLE patients. For performance evaluation of automatic segmentation, Dice coefficient, Hausdorff distance, Precision, and Root Mean Square (RMS) distance are extracted and compared. Among these four automated methods, ABSS generates the most accurate results and the reproducibility is more similar to expert manual outlining by statistical validation. By considering p-value<;0.05, the results of performance measurement for ABSS reveal that, Dice is 4%, 13%, and 17% higher, Hausdorff is 23%, 87%, and 70% lower, precision is 5%, -5%, and 12% higher, and RMS is 19%, 62%, and 65% lower compared to LocalInfo, FreeSurfer, and Hammer, respectively.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; brain; image segmentation; medical disorders; medical image processing; statistical analysis; Hausdorff distance; MR image segmentation; T1-weighted image segmentation; automatic brain structure segmentation method; automatic segmentation method; dice coefficient; epileptic patients; freesurfer method; hammer method; hippocampus segmentation; localinfo segmentation method; mTLE patients; mesial temporal lobe epilepsy; root mean square distance; statistical validation; Biomedical imaging; Hippocampus; Image segmentation; Magnetic resonance imaging; Manuals; Comparison; Epilepsy; Hippocampus; Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI); Segmentation;