Projects:RegistrationRegularization

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Collaborators: B.T. Thomas Yeo (MIT), Mert Sabuncu (MIT), Rahul Desikan (BU), Polina Golland (MIT), Bruce Fischl (MGH).

Description

We propose a unified framework for computing atlases from manually labeled data sets at various degrees of “sharpness” and the joint registration and segmentation of a new brain with these atlases. In non-rigid registration, the tradeoff between warp regularization and image fidelity is typically set empirically. In segmentation, this leads to a probabilistic atlas of arbitrary “sharpness”: weak regularization results in well-aligned training images, producing a “sharp” atlas; strong regularization yields a “blurry” atlas. We study the effects of this tradeoff in the context of cortical surface parcellation, but the framework applies to volume registration as well.

Results

We compare three special cases of our framework, namely:

(1) Progressive registration of a new brain to increasingly “sharp” atlases using increasingly flexible warps, by initializing each registration stage with the optimal warps from a “blurrier” atlas. We call this multiple atlases, multiple warp scales (MAMS).

(2) Progressive registration to a single atlas with increasingly flexible warps. We call this single atlas, multiple warp scales (SAMS).

(3) Registration to a single atlas with fixed constrained warps. We call this single atlas, single warp scale (SASS).

From the graph below, we note that the optimal parcellation algorithm in all three cases yield a statistically significant improvement over a state-of-the-art benchmark parcellation algorithm [1,2]. The optimal algorithms correspond to a unique balance between atlas “sharpness” and warp regularization.

Plot of Dice as a function of the warp scale S. Note that S is on a log scale. [math]\alpha[/math] corresponds to the sharpness of the atlas used.

References

[1] B. Fischl et al. Automatically Parcellating the Human cerebral Cortex. Cerebral Cortex, 14:11-22, 2004.

[2] R.S. Desikan et al. An automated labeling system for subdividing the human cerebral cortex on MRI scans into gyral based regions of interest. NeuroImage, 31:968-980, 2006.