Identifying Anatomical Shape Difference by Regularized Discriminative Direction

Date

2009

Authors

Zhou, Luping
Hartley, Richard
Wang, Lei
Lieby, Paulette
Barnes, Nicholas

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE Inc)

Abstract

Identifying the shape difference between two groups of anatomical objects is important for medical image analysis and computer-aided diagnosis. A method called "discriminative direction" in the literature has been proposed to solve this problem. In that method, the shape difference between groups is identified by deforming a shape along the discriminative direction. This paper conducts a thorough study about inferring this discriminative direction in an efficient and accurate way. First, finding the discrim inative direction is reformulated as a preimage problem in kernel-based learning. This provides a complementary but conceptually simpler solution than the previous method. More importantly, we find that a shape deforming along the original discriminative direction cannot faithfully maintain its anatomical correctness. This unnecessarily introduces spurious shape differences and leads to inaccurate analysis. To overcome this problem, this paper further proposes a regularized discriminative direction by requiring a shape to conform to its underlying distribution when it deforms. Two different approaches are developed to impose the regularization, one from the perspective of probability distributions and the other from a geometric point of view, and their relationship is discussed. After verifying their superior performance through controlled ex periments, we apply the proposed methods to detecting and localizing the hippocampal shape difference between sexes. We get results consistent with other independent research, providing a more compact representation of the shape difference compared with the established discriminative direction method.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Discriminative direction; Hippocampal shapes; Preimage problem; Shape distribution; Statistical shape analysis; Computer aided analysis; Computer aided diagnosis; Deformation; Education; Image analysis; Image retrieval; Probability density function; Proba Discriminative direction; Hippocampal shapes; Preimage problem; Shape distribution; Statistical shape analysis

Citation

Source

IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging

Type

Journal article

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Restricted until

2037-12-31