Multi-modal segmentation of 3D brain scans using neural networks
Purpose: To implement a brain segmentation pipeline based on convolutional neural networks, which rapidly segments 3D volumes into 27 anatomical structures. To provide an extensive, comparative study of segmentation performance on various contrasts of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed to...
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose: To implement a brain segmentation pipeline based on convolutional
neural networks, which rapidly segments 3D volumes into 27 anatomical
structures. To provide an extensive, comparative study of segmentation
performance on various contrasts of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and
computed tomography (CT) scans. Methods: Deep convolutional neural networks are
trained to segment 3D MRI (MPRAGE, DWI, FLAIR) and CT scans. A large database
of in total 851 MRI/CT scans is used for neural network training. Training
labels are obtained on the MPRAGE contrast and coregistered to the other
imaging modalities. The segmentation quality is quantified using the Dice
metric for a total of 27 anatomical structures. Dropout sampling is implemented
to identify corrupted input scans or low-quality segmentations. Full
segmentation of 3D volumes with more than 2 million voxels is obtained in less
than 1s of processing time on a graphical processing unit. Results: The best
average Dice score is found on $T_1$-weighted MPRAGE ($85.3\pm4.6\,\%$).
However, for FLAIR ($80.0\pm7.1\,\%$), DWI ($78.2\pm7.9\,\%$) and CT ($79.1\pm
7.9\,\%$), good-quality segmentation is feasible for most anatomical
structures. Corrupted input volumes or low-quality segmentations can be
detected using dropout sampling. Conclusion: The flexibility and performance of
deep convolutional neural networks enables the direct, real-time segmentation
of FLAIR, DWI and CT scans without requiring $T_1$-weighted scans. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2008.04594 |