CVJul 21, 2024
On the Viability of Semi-Supervised Segmentation Methods for Statistical Shape ModelingAsma Khan, Tushar Kataria, Janmesh Ukey et al.
Statistical Shape Models (SSMs) excel at identifying population level anatomical variations, which is at the core of various clinical and biomedical applications, including morphology-based diagnostics and surgical planning. However, the effectiveness of SSM is often constrained by the necessity for expert-driven manual segmentation, a process that is both time-intensive and expensive, thereby restricting their broader application and utility. Recent deep learning approaches enable the direct estimation of Statistical Shape Models (SSMs) from unsegmented images. While these models can predict SSMs without segmentation during deployment, they do not address the challenge of acquiring the manual annotations needed for training, particularly in resource-limited settings. Semi-supervised models for anatomy segmentation can mitigate the annotation burden. Yet, despite the abundance of available approaches, there are no established guidelines to inform end-users on their effectiveness for the downstream task of constructing SSMs. In this study, we systematically evaluate the potential of semi-supervised methods as viable alternatives to manual segmentations for building SSMs. We establish a new performance benchmark by employing various semi-supervised methods for anatomy segmentation under low annotation settings, utilizing the predicted segmentations for the task of SSM. Our results indicate that some methods produce noisy segmentation, which is very unfavorable for SSM tasks, while others can capture the correct modes of variations in the population cohort with 60-80% reduction in required manual annotation
CVMar 16, 2024
MASSM: An End-to-End Deep Learning Framework for Multi-Anatomy Statistical Shape Modeling Directly From ImagesJanmesh Ukey, Tushar Kataria, Shireen Y. Elhabian
Statistical Shape Modeling (SSM) effectively analyzes anatomical variations within populations but is limited by the need for manual localization and segmentation, which relies on scarce medical expertise. Recent advances in deep learning have provided a promising approach that automatically generates statistical representations (as point distribution models or PDMs) from unsegmented images. Once trained, these deep learning-based models eliminate the need for manual segmentation for new subjects. Most deep learning methods still require manual pre-alignment of image volumes and bounding box specification around the target anatomy, leading to a partially manual inference process. Recent approaches facilitate anatomy localization but only estimate population-level statistical representations and cannot directly delineate anatomy in images. Additionally, they are limited to modeling a single anatomy. We introduce MASSM, a novel end-to-end deep learning framework that simultaneously localizes multiple anatomies, estimates population-level statistical representations, and delineates shape representations directly in image space. Our results show that MASSM, which delineates anatomy in image space and handles multiple anatomies through a multitask network, provides superior shape information compared to segmentation networks for medical imaging tasks. Estimating Statistical Shape Models (SSM) is a stronger task than segmentation, as it encodes a more robust statistical prior for the objects to be detected and delineated. MASSM allows for more accurate and comprehensive shape representations, surpassing the capabilities of traditional pixel-wise segmentation.