Comparison of image intensity, local, and multi-atlas priors in brain tissue classification

Automated and accurate tissue classification in three-dimensional brain magnetic resonance images is essential in volumetric morphometry or as a preprocessing step for diagnosing brain diseases. However, noise, intensity in homogeneity, and partial volume effects limit the classification accuracy of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMedical physics (Lancaster) Vol. 44; no. 11; p. 5782
Main Authors Wang, Liping, Labrosse, Frédéric, Zwiggelaar, Reyer
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.11.2017
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Summary:Automated and accurate tissue classification in three-dimensional brain magnetic resonance images is essential in volumetric morphometry or as a preprocessing step for diagnosing brain diseases. However, noise, intensity in homogeneity, and partial volume effects limit the classification accuracy of existing methods. This paper provides a comparative study on the contributions of three commonly used image information priors for tissue classification in normal brains: image intensity, local, and multi-atlas priors. We compared the effectiveness of the three priors by comparing the four methods modeling them: K-Means (KM), KM combined with a Markov Random Field (KM-MRF), multi-atlas segmentation (MAS), and the combination of KM, MRF, and MAS (KM-MRF-MAS). The key parameters and factors in each of the four methods are analyzed, and the performance of all the models is compared quantitatively and qualitatively on both simulated and real data. The KM-MRF-MAS model that combines the three image information priors performs best. The image intensity prior is insufficient to generate reasonable results for a few images. Introducing local and multi-atlas priors results in improved brain tissue classification. This study provides a general guide on what image information priors can be used for effective brain tissue classification.
ISSN:2473-4209
DOI:10.1002/mp.12511