Paper
15 March 2006 Automated brain segmentation using neural networks
Stephanie Powell, Vincent Magnotta, Hans Johnson, Nancy Andreasen
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Automated methods to delineate brain structures of interest are required to analyze large amounts of imaging data like that being collected in several on going multi-center studies. We have previously reported on using artificial neural networks (ANN) to define subcortical brain structures such as the thalamus (0.825), caudate (0.745), and putamen (0.755). One of the inputs into the ANN is the apriori probability of a structure existing at a given location. In this previous work, the apriori probability information was generated in Talairach space using a piecewise linear registration. In this work we have increased the dimensionality of this registration using Thirion's demons registration algorithm. The input vector consisted of apriori probability, spherical coordinates, and an iris of surrounding signal intensity values. The output of the neural network determined if the voxel was defined as one of the N regions used for training. Training was performed using a standard back propagation algorithm. The ANN was trained on a set of 15 images for 750,000,000 iterations. The resulting ANN weights were then applied to 6 test images not part of the training set. Relative overlap calculated for each structure was 0.875 for the thalamus, 0.845 for the caudate, and 0.814 for the putamen. With the modifications on the neural net algorithm and the use of multi-dimensional registration, we found substantial improvement in the automated segmentation method. The resulting segmented structures are as reliable as manual raters and the output of the neural network can be used without additional rater intervention.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Stephanie Powell, Vincent Magnotta, Hans Johnson, and Nancy Andreasen "Automated brain segmentation using neural networks", Proc. SPIE 6144, Medical Imaging 2006: Image Processing, 61443Q (15 March 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.651725
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CITATIONS
Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Neural networks

Image segmentation

Brain

Thalamus

Image registration

Smoothing

Evolutionary algorithms

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