Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9669548 | Computer Vision and Image Understanding | 2005 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
In this paper, we focus on the automated extraction of the cerebrospinal fluid-tissue boundary, particularly around the ventricular surface, from serial structural MRI of the brain acquired in imaging studies of aging and dementia. This is a challenging segmentation problem because of the common occurrence of peri-ventricular lesions which locally alter the appearance of white matter. We examine a level set approach which evolves a 4D description of the ventricular surface over time. This has the advantage of allowing constraints on the contour in the temporal direction, improving the consistency of the extracted object over time. The 3D MR images of the entire brain are first aligned using global rigid registration. We then follow the approach proposed by Chan and Vese which is based on the Mumford and Shah model and implemented using the Osher and Sethian level set method. We have extended this to the 4D case to propagate a 4D contour toward the tissue boundaries through the evolution of a 5D implicit function. For convergence we use region-based information provided by the image rather than the gradient of the image. This model is then adapted to allow intensity contrast changes between time frames in the MRI sequence. Results on time sequences of 3D brain MR images are presented and discussed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Authors
Corina S. Drapaca, Valerie Cardenas, Colin Studholme,