Title :
Model-based segmentation of brain tissue and tumor
Author :
Gerig, Guido ; Moon, Nathan ; Ho, Sean ; Bullit, Elizabeth
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Combining image segmentation based on statistical classification with a geometric prior shows a significant increase in robustness and reproducibility. Using a probabilistic geometric model of sought structures helps with initialization of probability density functions and defines spatial constraints. A strong spatial prior, however, prevents segmentation of structures that are not part of the model. In practical applications presenting pathology, e.g. brain tumors, we encounter the presentation of new objects not modelled by a statistical atlas of healthy anatomy. We developed an extension to an existing expectation maximization segmentation (EM) algorithm that modifies a probabilistic brain atlas with individual subject´s information which results in an automatic, atlas-based classification of healthy tissue and pathology. Object segmentation requires spatial grouping of classified voxels. For tumors, we use the geometric model of blobby shaped objects and use region-competition level-set evolution. The statistical classification of the classification step serves as a probabilistic measure for object and background. The geodesic snake, initialized by the noisy tumor classification and locally driven by object/background probabilities, generates smooth, blobby structures presenting tumors. The new brain and tumor segmentation method has been tested on five cases presenting different tumor types and shapes. A preliminary validation compared these segmentations with manual expert´s results.
Keywords :
biological tissues; brain models; image classification; image segmentation; medical image processing; statistical analysis; tumours; automatic atlas-based classification; blobby shaped objects; brain tissue; brain tumors; expectation maximization segmentation algorithm; geodesic snake; geometric model; geometric prior; image segmentation; model-based segmentation; noisy tumor classification; object segmentation; object/background probabilities; pathology; probabilistic brain atlas; probabilistic geometric model; probability density function initialization; region-competition level-set evolution; reproducibility; robustness; smooth blobby structures; sought structures; spatial constraints; statistical classification; strong spatial prior; tumor shapes; tumor types; Anatomy; Brain modeling; Image segmentation; Neoplasms; Object segmentation; Pathology; Probability density function; Reproducibility of results; Robustness; Solid modeling;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 2002. 24th Annual Conference and the Annual Fall Meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Society EMBS/BMES Conference, 2002. Proceedings of the Second Joint
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7612-9
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2002.1106282