When deep learning meets data alignment: A review on deep registration networks (DRNS)

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Abstract

This paper reviews recent deep learning-based registration methods. Registration is the process that computes the transformation that aligns datasets, and the accuracy of the result depends on multiple factors. The most significant factors are the size of input data; the presence of noise, outliers and occlusions; the quality of the extracted features; real-time requirements; and the type of transformation, especially those defined by multiple parameters, such as non-rigid deformations. Deep Registration Networks (DRNs) are those architectures trying to solve the alignment task using a learning algorithm. In this review, we classify these methods according to a proposed framework based on the traditional registration pipeline. This pipeline consists of four steps: target selection, feature extraction, feature matching, and transform computation for the alignment. This new paradigm introduces a higher-level understanding of registration, which makes explicit the challenging problems of traditional approaches. The main contribution of this work is to provide a comprehensive starting point to address registration problems from a learning-based perspective and to understand the new range of possibilities.

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Villena-Martinez, V., Oprea, S., Saval-Calvo, M., Azorin-Lopez, J., Fuster-Guillo, A., & Fisher, R. B. (2020, November 1). When deep learning meets data alignment: A review on deep registration networks (DRNS). Applied Sciences (Switzerland). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10217524

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