Ground-truth effects in learning-based fiber orientation distribution estimation in neonatal brains.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_04C712DE90F7
Type
Autre: use this type when nothing else fits.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Ground-truth effects in learning-based fiber orientation distribution estimation in neonatal brains.
Author(s)
Lin R., Kebiri H., Gholipour A., Chen Y., Thiran J.P., Karimi D., Cuadra M.B.
ISSN
2331-8422 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2331-8422
Issued date
02/09/2024
Language
english
Abstract
Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) is a noninvasive method for depicting brain microstructure in vivo. Fiber orientation distributions (FODs) are mathematical representations extensively used to map white matter fiber configurations. Recently, FOD estimation with deep neural networks has seen growing success, in particular, those of neonates estimated with fewer diffusion measurements. These methods are mostly trained on target FODs reconstructed with multi-shell multi-tissue constrained spherical deconvolution (MSMT-CSD), which might not be the ideal ground truth for developing brains. Here, we investigate this hypothesis by training a state-of-the-art model based on the U-Net architecture on both MSMT-CSD and single-shell three-tissue constrained spherical deconvolution (SS3T-CSD). Our results suggest that SS3T-CSD might be more suited for neonatal brains, given that the ratio between single and multiple fiber-estimated voxels with SS3T-CSD is more realistic compared to MSMT-CSD. Additionally, increasing the number of input gradient directions significantly improves performance with SS3T-CSD over MSMT-CSD. Finally, in an age domain-shift setting, SS3T-CSD maintains robust performance across age groups, indicating its potential for more accurate neonatal brain imaging.
Keywords
Age domain shift, Deep learning, FOD estimation, MSMT-CSD, Neonatal brain, SS3T-CSD
Pubmed
Create date
25/09/2024 9:04
Last modification date
26/09/2024 6:19
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