Multimodal Correlative Preclinical Whole Body Imaging and Segmentation

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Abstract

Segmentation of anatomical structures and particularly abdominal organs is a fundamental problem for quantitative image analysis in preclinical research. This paper presents a novel approach for whole body segmentation of small animals in a multimodal setting of MR, CT and optical imaging. The algorithm integrates multiple imaging sequences into a machine learning framework, which generates supervoxels by an efficient hierarchical agglomerative strategy and utilizes multiple SVM-kNN classifiers each constrained by a heatmap prior region to compose the segmentation. We demonstrate results showing segmentation of mice images into several structures including the heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, stomach, vena cava, bladder, tumor, and skeleton structures. Experimental validation on a large set of mice and organs, indicated that our system outperforms alternative state of the art approaches. The system proposed can be generalized to various tissues and imaging modalities to produce automatic atlas-free segmentation, thereby enabling a wide range of applications in preclinical studies of small animal imaging.

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Akselrod-Ballin, A., Dafni, H., Addadi, Y., Biton, I., Avni, R., Brenner, Y., & Neeman, M. (2016). Multimodal Correlative Preclinical Whole Body Imaging and Segmentation. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep27940

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