NeuRegenerate: A Framework for Visualizing Neurodegeneration
This work addresses the limitation of single-timepoint imaging in neuroscience by enabling subject-specific visualization of neural changes, though it is incremental as it builds on existing cycleGAN methods.
The authors tackled the problem of visualizing neurodegeneration by predicting changes in neural fiber morphology across age-timepoints, achieving a reconstruction accuracy of 94% with their neuReGANerator network.
Recent advances in high-resolution microscopy have allowed scientists to better understand the underlying brain connectivity. However, due to the limitation that biological specimens can only be imaged at a single timepoint, studying changes to neural projections is limited to general observations using population analysis. In this paper, we introduce NeuRegenerate, a novel end-to-end framework for the prediction and visualization of changes in neural fiber morphology within a subject, for specified age-timepoints.To predict projections, we present neuReGANerator, a deep-learning network based on cycle-consistent generative adversarial network (cycleGAN) that translates features of neuronal structures in a region, across age-timepoints, for large brain microscopy volumes. We improve the reconstruction quality of neuronal structures by implementing a density multiplier and a new loss function, called the hallucination loss.Moreover, to alleviate artifacts that occur due to tiling of large input volumes, we introduce a spatial-consistency module in the training pipeline of neuReGANerator. We show that neuReGANerator has a reconstruction accuracy of 94% in predicting neuronal structures. Finally, to visualize the predicted change in projections, NeuRegenerate offers two modes: (1) neuroCompare to simultaneously visualize the difference in the structures of the neuronal projections, across the age timepoints, and (2) neuroMorph, a vesselness-based morphing technique to interactively visualize the transformation of the structures from one age-timepoint to the other. Our framework is designed specifically for volumes acquired using wide-field microscopy. We demonstrate our framework by visualizing the structural changes in neuronal fibers within the cholinergic system of the mouse brain between a young and old specimen.