Medical Image Analysis
Volume 12, Issue 5 , Pages 616-625, October 2008

Homeomorphic brain image segmentation with topological and statistical atlases

Laboratory of Medical Image Computing, Neuroradiology Division, Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA

Received 31 January 2008; received in revised form 14 May 2008; accepted 10 June 2008. published online 24 June 2008.

Abstract 

Atlas-based segmentation techniques are often employed to encode anatomical information for the delineation of multiple structures in magnetic resonance images of the brain. One of the primary challenges of these approaches is to efficiently model qualitative and quantitative anatomical knowledge without introducing a strong bias toward certain anatomical preferences when segmenting new images. This paper explores the use of topological information as a prior and proposes a segmentation framework based on both topological and statistical atlases of brain anatomy. Topology can be used to describe continuity of structures, as well as the relationships between structures, and is often a critical component in cortical surface reconstruction and deformation-based morphometry. Our method guarantees strict topological equivalence between the segmented image and the atlas, and relies only weakly on a statistical atlas of shape. Tissue classification and fast marching methods are used to provide a powerful and flexible framework to handle multiple image contrasts, high levels of noise, gain field inhomogeneities, and variable anatomies. The segmentation algorithm has been validated on simulated and real brain image data and made freely available to researchers. Our experiments demonstrate the accuracy and robustness of the method and the limited influence of the statistical atlas.

Keywords: Brain segmentation, Topological atlas, Fast marching segmentation, Digital homeomorphism

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PII: S1361-8415(08)00060-1

doi:10.1016/j.media.2008.06.008

Medical Image Analysis
Volume 12, Issue 5 , Pages 616-625, October 2008