White matter segmentation of Brain MRI during infancy
Péporté, Michèle, Ilea, Dana E., Twomey, Eilish and Whelan, Paul F.ORCID: 0000-0001-9230-7656
(2013)
White matter segmentation of Brain MRI during infancy.
In: BioPIC 2013 BioPhotonics and imagining conference, 25-27 March, Dublin, Ireland.
The objective of this study is the development of an automatic segmentation framework to measure the volume changes in white matter tissue from premature infant MRI data. Due to the early stage of the developing brain which results in a high water content in brain tissue, several major computational challenges arise including artefacts, intensity variations and partial volume effect.The first component of the framework is the development of a novel brain extraction method [1][2]. Due to the overlapping of intensity values across different brain tissues, a primary challenge is the removal of non-brain tissue such as skull, fluid, fat and body parts.The second component involves the intensity inhomogeneities called bias field and has a significant effect on the segmentation. The intensity variations described as a low-frequency multiplicative artefact is a result of the inhomogeneity in the magnetic field during the MRI acquisition.The last component is a novel probabilistic model which segments and measures the white matter volume. The key element is the classification of the partial volume voxels which is achieved by an expectation-maximization algorithm combined with a probabilistic segmentation scheme. Examples of each step of this framework are presented in Fig. 1