Title :
Multi-modal image registration using structural features
Author :
Kasiri, Keyvan ; Clausi, David A. ; Fieguth, Paul
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Syst. Design Eng., Univ. of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada
Abstract :
Multi-modal image registration has been a challenging task in medical images because of the complex intensity relationship between images to be aligned. Registration methods often rely on the statistical intensity relationship between the images which suffers from problems such as statistical insufficiency. The proposed registration method works based on extracting structural features by utilizing the complex phase and gradient-based information. By employing structural relationships between different modalities instead of complex similarity measures, the multi-modal registration problem is converted into a mono-modal one. Therefore, conventional mono-modal similarity measures can be utilized to evaluate the registration results. This new registration paradigm has been tested on magnetic resonance (MR) brain images of different modes. The method has been evaluated based on target registration error (TRE) to determine alignment accuracy. Quantitative results demonstrate that the proposed method is capable of achieving comparable registration accuracy compared to the conventional mutual information.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; brain; error analysis; feature extraction; image matching; image registration; medical image processing; neurophysiology; MR brain image modes; TRE; alignment accuracy; complex image intensity relationship; complex phase information; complex similarity measures; conventional monomodal similarity measures; conventional mutual information; gradient-based information; imaging modality; magnetic resonance brain images; medical image alignment; monomodal registration problem; multimodal image registration; multimodal registration problem; quantitative analysis; registration accuracy; registration evaluation; registration paradigm; statistical image intensity relationship; statistical insufficiency; structural feature extraction; structural relationships; target registration error; Accuracy; Brain; Feature extraction; Image edge detection; Image registration; Image segmentation; Noise;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944884