Towards automatic bone age estimation from MRI: Localization of 3D anatomical landmarks

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Abstract

Bone age estimation (BAE) is an important procedure in forensic practice which recently has seen a shift in attention from X-ray to MRI based imaging. To automate BAE from MRI, localization of the joints between hand bones is a crucial first step, which is challenging due to anatomical variations, different poses and repeating structures within the hand. We propose a landmark localization algorithm using multiple random regression forests, first analyzing the shape of the hand from information of the whole image, thus implicitly modeling the global landmark configuration, followed by a refinement based on more local information to increase prediction accuracy. We are able to clearly outperform related approaches on our dataset of 60 T1-weighted MR images, achieving a mean landmark localization error of 1.4±1.5mm, while having only 0.25% outliers with an error greater than 10mm. © 2014 Springer International Publishing.

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Ebner, T., Stern, D., Donner, R., Bischof, H., & Urschler, M. (2014). Towards automatic bone age estimation from MRI: Localization of 3D anatomical landmarks. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 8674 LNCS, pp. 421–428). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10470-6_53

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