Title :
Early diagnosis of dementia based on intersubject whole-brain dissimilarities
Author :
Klein, S. ; Loog, M. ; van der Lijn, F. ; den Heijer, T. ; Hammers, A. ; de Bruijne, M. ; van der Lugt, A. ; Duin, R.P.W. ; Breteler, M.M.B. ; Niessen, W.J.
Author_Institution :
Depts. of Radiol. & Med. Inf., Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Abstract :
This article studies the possibility of detecting dementia in an early stage, using nonrigid registration of MR brain scans in combination with dissimilarity-based pattern recognition techniques. Instead of focussing on the shape of a single brain structure, we take into account the shape differences within the entire brain. Imaging data was obtained from a longitudinal, population based study of the elderly. A set of 29 subjects was identified, who were asymptomatic at the time of scanning, but were diagnosed as having dementia within 0.7 to 5 years after the scan, and a set of 29 age and gender matched healthy controls were selected. Each subject was registered to all other subjects, using a nonrigid registration algorithm. Based on statistics of the deformation field in the brain, a dissimilarity measure was calculated between each pair of subjects, yielding a 58×58 dissimilarity matrix. A kNN classifier was trained on the dissimilarity matrix and the performance was tested in a leave-one-out experiment. A classification accuracy of 81% was attained (spec. 83%, sens. 79%). This demonstrates the potential of whole-brain intersubject dissimilarities to aid in early diagnosis of dementia.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; brain; deformation; diseases; image classification; image registration; medical image processing; 58×58 dissimilarity matrix; MRI; deformation field; dementia; dissimilarity-based pattern recognition; early diagnosis; kNN classifier; nonrigid registration algorithm; shape differences; single brain structure; whole-brain intersubject dissimilarities; Biomarkers; Biomedical imaging; Brain; Computer science; Dementia; Diseases; Pattern recognition; Radiology; Senior citizens; Shape; brain imaging; classification; dementia; dissimilarity; image registration;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Imaging: From Nano to Macro, 2010 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Rotterdam
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4125-9
Electronic_ISBN :
1945-7928
DOI :
10.1109/ISBI.2010.5490366