SPIE 2012 DTI Workshop

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Exploring Brain Connectivity in-vivo: from Theory to Practice - A hands-on analysis workshop on Diffusion MRI by the National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (NA-MIC)

Course Description:

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The development of Diffusion Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging (DT-MRI) has opened up the possibility of studying the complex organization of the brain's white matter in-vivo. By measuring the diffusion of water molecules in tissues, the technique gives insights into the structure and orientation of major white matter pathways, and DT-MRI findings have the potential to play a critical role in the extraction of meaningful information for diagnosis, prognosis and following of treatment response. The course will guide participants through the fundamental aspects of DT-MRI data analysis, as well as the challenges of transferring cutting-edge DT-MRI techniques to clinical routine. The format will include a series of hands-on sessions with the participants running DT-MRI analysis on their own laptops, to provide a practical experience of extracting useful clinical information from Diffusion MR images. The hands-on sessions will use DT-MRI tools from the NA-MIC toolkit, which include the 3DSlicer software, an open-source platform for medical image processing and 3D visualization used in biomedical and clinical research. Participants will be guided through an integrated workflow for exploring the brain white matter in a series of datasets that will be provided as part of the course. This event is part of the on-going effort of the NIH-funded National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (NA-MIC) to transfer the latest advances in biomedical image analysis to the scientific and clinical community.

Date and Location

The SC1065 course will be held on Sunday February 5, 2012 from 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm at SPIE Medical Imaging 2012, San Diego, California.

Faculty

  • Sonia Pujol, Ph.D., Surgical Planning Laboratory, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
  • Martin Styner, Ph.D.,Neuro Image Research and Analysis Laboratory, University of North Carolina
  • Guido Gerig, Ph.D., The Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah

Registration

To register for this course, please visit the SPIE 2012 conference website.

Learning Outcomes

This course will enable participants to:

  • identify the different components of a DT-MRI fiber tract analysis pipeline
  • perform DWI/DTI data quality control
  • visualize 3D tensor fields and diffusion-derived maps
  • generate 3D reconstructions of white matter tracts in a normal subject and pathological case
  • extract and visualize DTI fiber tract profiles
  • identify the current challenges inherent in using DT-MRI data in the clinics

For questions related to the workshop, please send an e-mail to Sonia Pujol (spujol at bwh.harvard.edu).

Intended Audience

Scientists, engineers, and clinical researchers who are interested in learning how to use Diffusion Tensor MR Imaging for mapping the white matter of the human brain in health and disease. This course does not need any prior knwoledge, but it can ideally be combined with the course SC 1063: Diffusion Imaging.

Tentative Agenda

  • 12:30-1:30 pm Pre-workshop installation of software and datasets
  • 1:30-1:35 pm Introduction to the course (Sonia Pujol)
  • 1:35-2:00 pm Fundamentals of DTI analysis (Guido Gerig)
  • 2:00-2:10 pm Presentation of the hands-on DTI pipeline (Sonia Pujol)
  • 2:10-2:40 pm Dicom conversion and DWI Quality Control (Martin Styner) (Dicom to Nrrd, DTIPrep)
  • 2:40-3:45 pm General Tractography pipeline in Slicer (Sonia Pujol) (Tensor Estimation, Property computation computation, Glyphs, fiber tracking)
  • 3:45-4:00 pm Coffee Break
  • 4:00-4:20 pm DTI (pairwise) registration for clinical studies (Guido Gerig/Martin Styner)
  • 4:20-4:45 pm DTI fiber profile processing and analysis (Martin Styner)
  • 4:45-5:15 pm Towards DTI validation (Sonia Pujol)
  • 5:15-5:30 pm Conclusion and Questions from the audience

Preparation for the hands-on sessions: Software and datasets

The workshop combines oral presentations and instructor-led hands-on sessions with the participants working on their own laptop computers. All participants are required to come with their own laptop computer and install the software and datasets prior to the event. A minimum of 2 GB of RAM (4 GB is better) and a graphic accelerator with 256 MB (512MB is better) of on-board graphic memory are required. The 3DSlicer version 4.0 software and datasets to download will be posted a few weeks before the event on this website.

The following OS are supported:

  • MacOS X Lion
  • Windows 7 (VS 2008)
  • Linux 64

Datasets:

Slicer Community

Participants are invited to join the Slicer user and Slicer developer community prior to the workshop, for questions and feature requests related to the software.

Slicer4 Training Survey

Click here to take the Slicer4 Training Survey


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