CVJan 16, 2018

Joint registration and synthesis using a probabilistic model for alignment of MRI and histological sections

arXiv:1801.05284v15 citations
Originality Highly original
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This addresses a critical bottleneck in medical imaging for researchers and clinicians by enabling more accurate 3D histology reconstruction from MRI without the need for hard-to-obtain aligned data.

The paper tackles the problem of aligning 2D histological sections with MRI slices for 3D reconstruction by proposing a probabilistic model that jointly solves registration and synthesis without requiring aligned training data. The method improves registration accuracy and robustness over mutual information, as demonstrated on synthetic and public datasets.

Nonlinear registration of 2D histological sections with corresponding slices of MRI data is a critical step of 3D histology reconstruction. This task is difficult due to the large differences in image contrast and resolution, as well as the complex nonrigid distortions produced when sectioning the sample and mounting it on the glass slide. It has been shown in brain MRI registration that better spatial alignment across modalities can be obtained by synthesizing one modality from the other and then using intra-modality registration metrics, rather than by using mutual information (MI) as metric. However, such an approach typically requires a database of aligned images from the two modalities, which is very difficult to obtain for histology/MRI. Here, we overcome this limitation with a probabilistic method that simultaneously solves for registration and synthesis directly on the target images, without any training data. In our model, the MRI slice is assumed to be a contrast-warped, spatially deformed version of the histological section. We use approximate Bayesian inference to iteratively refine the probabilistic estimate of the synthesis and the registration, while accounting for each other's uncertainty. Moreover, manually placed landmarks can be seamlessly integrated in the framework for increased performance. Experiments on a synthetic dataset show that, compared with MI, the proposed method makes it possible to use a much more flexible deformation model in the registration to improve its accuracy, without compromising robustness. Moreover, our framework also exploits information in manually placed landmarks more efficiently than MI, since landmarks inform both synthesis and registration - as opposed to registration alone. Finally, we show qualitative results on the public Allen atlas, in which the proposed method provides a clear improvement over MI based registration.

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