CVMar 17, 2019

An Optimized PatchMatch for Multi-scale and Multi-feature Label Fusion

arXiv:1903.07165v267 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of slow segmentation processing for medical imaging researchers, offering an incremental improvement with new multi-scale and multi-feature strategies.

The paper tackles the computational inefficiency of patch-based label fusion for MRI segmentation by introducing OPAL, which drastically reduces computation time and achieves the highest median Dice coefficients (89.9% for ICBM and 90.1% for EADC-ADNI) on hippocampus segmentation datasets.

Automatic segmentation methods are important tools for quantitative analysis of Magnetic Resonance Images (MRI). Recently, patch-based label fusion approaches have demonstrated state-of-the-art segmentation accuracy. In this paper, we introduce a new patch-based label fusion framework to perform segmentation of anatomical structures. The proposed approach uses an Optimized PAtchMatch Label fusion (OPAL) strategy that drastically reduces the computation time required for the search of similar patches. The reduced computation time of OPAL opens the way for new strategies and facilitates processing on large databases. In this paper, we investigate new perspectives offered by OPAL, by introducing a new multi-scale and multi-feature framework. During our validation on hippocampus segmentation we use two datasets: young adults in the ICBM cohort and elderly adults in the EADC-ADNI dataset. For both, OPAL is compared to state-of-the-art methods. Results show that OPAL obtained the highest median Dice coefficient (89.9% for ICBM and 90.1% for EADC-ADNI). Moreover, in both cases, OPAL produced a segmentation accuracy similar to inter-expert variability. On the EADC-ADNI dataset, we compare the hippocampal volumes obtained by manual and automatic segmentation. The volumes appear to be highly correlated that enables to perform more accurate separation of pathological populations.

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