Title :
Spatio-temporal analysis of early brain development
Author :
Sadeghi, Neda ; Prastawa, Marcel ; Gilmore, John H. ; Lin, Weili ; Gerig, Guido
Author_Institution :
Sci. Comput. & Imaging Inst., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Abstract :
Analysis of human brain development is a crucial step for improved understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders. We focus on normal brain development as is observed in the multimodal longitudinal MRI/DTI data of neonates to two years of age. We present a spatio-temporal analysis framework using Gompertz function as a population growth model with three different spatial localization strategies: voxel-based, data driven clustering and atlas driven regional analysis. Growth models from multimodal imaging channels collected at each voxel form feature vectors which are clustered using the Dirichlet Process Mixture Models (DPMM). Clustering thus combines growth information from different modalities to subdivide the image into voxel groups with similar properties. The processing generates spatial maps that highlight the dynamic progression of white matter development. These maps show progression of white matter maturation where primarily, central regions mature earlier compared to the periphery, but where more subtle regional differences in growth can be observed. Atlas based analysis allows a quantitative analysis of a specific anatomical region, whereas data driven clustering identifies regions of similar growth patterns. The combination of these two allows us to investigate growth patterns within an anatomical region. Specifically, analysis of anterior and posterior limb of internal capsule show that there are different growth trajectories within these anatomies, and that it may be useful to divide certain anatomies into subregions with distinctive growth patterns.
Keywords :
biodiffusion; biomedical MRI; medical image processing; pattern clustering; Dirichlet process mixture models; Gompertz function; anterior limb analysis; atlas driven regional analysis; data driven clustering; diffusion tensor imaging; early brain development; human brain development analysis; magnetic resonance imaging; multimodal imaging channels; multimodal longitudinal MRI-DTI data; neurodevelopmental disorders; population growth model; posterior limb analysis; quantitative analysis; spatial localization strategy; spatio-temporal analysis; voxel-based analysis; Brain modeling; Data models; Diffusion tensor imaging; Pediatrics; Tensile stress; Trajectory; Brain development; Diffusion tensor imaging; Growth trajectory; Longitudinal analysis; MRI;
Conference_Titel :
Signals, Systems and Computers (ASILOMAR), 2010 Conference Record of the Forty Fourth Asilomar Conference on
Conference_Location :
Pacific Grove, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9722-5
DOI :
10.1109/ACSSC.2010.5757670