• DocumentCode
    3494388
  • Title

    Building spatiotemporal anatomical models using joint 4-D segmentation, registration, and subject-specific atlas estimation

  • Author

    Prastawa, Marcel ; Awate, Suyash P. ; Gerig, Guido

  • Author_Institution
    Sci. Comput. & Imaging (SCI) Inst., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    9-10 Jan. 2012
  • Firstpage
    49
  • Lastpage
    56
  • Abstract
    Longitudinal analysis of anatomical changes is a vital component in many personalized-medicine applications for predicting disease onset, determining growth/atrophy patterns, evaluating disease progression, and monitoring recovery. Estimating anatomical changes in longitudinal studies, especially through magnetic resonance (MR) images, is challenging because of temporal variability in shape (e.g. from growth/atrophy) and appearance (e.g. due to imaging parameters and tissue properties affecting intensity contrast, or from scanner calibration). This paper proposes a novel mathematical framework for constructing subject-specific longitudinal anatomical models. The proposed method solves a generalized problem of joint segmentation, registration, and subject-specific atlas building, which involves not just two images, but an entire longitudinal image sequence. The proposed framework describes a novel approach that integrates fundamental principles that underpin methods for image segmentation, image registration, and atlas construction. This paper presents evaluation on simulated longitudinal data and on clinical longitudinal brain MRI data. The results demonstrate that the proposed framework effectively integrates information from 4-D spatiotemporal data to generate spatiotemporal models that allow analysis of anatomical changes over time.
  • Keywords
    biomedical MRI; brain; diseases; image registration; image segmentation; image sequences; medical image processing; neurophysiology; patient monitoring; physiological models; spatiotemporal phenomena; 4D spatiotemporal data; atlas construction; building spatiotemporal anatomical models; clinical longitudinal brain MRI data; disease progression; growth-atrophy patterns; image registration; image segmentation; joint 4D segmentation; longitudinal image sequence; magnetic resonance imaging; mathematical framework; personalized-medicine applications; simulated longitudinal data; spatiotemporal models; subject-specific atlas estimation; subject-specific longitudinal anatomical models; Brain modeling; Data models; Image segmentation; Kernel; Mathematical model; Shape; Spatiotemporal phenomena;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Mathematical Methods in Biomedical Image Analysis (MMBIA), 2012 IEEE Workshop on
  • Conference_Location
    Breckenridge, CO
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-0352-1
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4673-0353-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MMBIA.2012.6164740
  • Filename
    6164740