DocumentCode
1116437
Title
Accurate Localization of Brain Activity in Presurgical fMRI by Structure Adaptive Smoothing
Author
Tabelow, K. ; Polzehl, J. ; Ulug, A.M. ; Dyke, J.P. ; Watts, R. ; Heier, L.A. ; Voss, H.U.
Author_Institution
Weierstrass Inst. for Appl. Anal. & Stochastics, Berlin
Volume
27
Issue
4
fYear
2008
fDate
4/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
531
Lastpage
537
Abstract
An important problem of the analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiments is to achieve some noise reduction of the data without blurring the shape of the activation areas. As a novel solution to this problem, recently the propagation-separation (PS) approach has been proposed. PS is a structure adaptive smoothing method that adapts to different shapes of activation areas. In this paper, we demonstrate how this method results in a more accurate localization of brain activity. First, it is shown in numerical simulations that PS is superior over Gaussian smoothing with respect to the accurate description of the shape of activation clusters and results in less false detections. Second, in a study of 37 presurgical planning cases we found that PS and Gaussian smoothing often yield different results, and we present examples showing aspects of the superiority of PS as applied to presurgical planning.
Keywords
biomedical MRI; brain; image denoising; image restoration; medical image processing; neurophysiology; surgery; Gaussian smoothing; activation clusters; brain activity localization; functional magnetic resonance imaging; neurosurgical planning; noise reduction; presurgical functional MRI; propagation-separation approach; spatial filtering; structure adaptive smoothing; Biomedical imaging; Brain; Epilepsy; Levee; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neoplasms; Shape; Signal to noise ratio; Smoothing methods; Surgery; Adaptive estimation; functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI); neurosurgical planning; spatial filtering; Algorithms; Brain Mapping; Brain Neoplasms; Humans; Image Enhancement; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Preoperative Care; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0062
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMI.2007.908684
Filename
4479635
Link To Document