Title :
Development of in vivo high resolution individual based neuroanatomical atlases using magnetic resonance imaging
Author :
Walters, N. ; Jenkinson, Mark ; Kean, Michael ; Watson, John D G ; Egan, Gary F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Medicine, Sydney Univ., NSW, Australia
Abstract :
The study of individual variation in brain anatomy has been neglected by most researchers in the functional brain imaging field. Almost all results of functional imaging experiments are referenced to standard atlases or "average" anatomical features. We believe that individual variation will inform us of crucial structural, developmental and functional aspects of the human brain, particularly with the rapidly expanding knowledge of the human genome. As a first step towards this we describe a non-invasive method of generating high resolution unique anatomical atlases for each subject in an experimental group using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Essentially, the method enables images of partial brain regions from multiple imaging sessions to be progressively combined into a high resolution neuroanatomical atlas. In this way, a single high resolution brain volume can be built up like "patchwork" from separate partial brain volumes. This will allow precise localisation and correlation of functional results and we believe will be hypothesis-generating in the areas of developmental, neurobiology and clinical neuroscience.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; brain; medical image processing; brain anatomy; functional brain imaging; high resolution brain volume; high resolution neuroanatomical atlas; high resolution unique anatomical atlases; human brain; human genome; in vivo high resolution individual based neuroanatomical atlases; magnetic resonance imaging; multiple imaging sessions; partial brain regions; Anatomy; Bioinformatics; Brain; Genomics; High-resolution imaging; Humans; Image resolution; In vivo; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neuroscience;
Conference_Titel :
Neural Information Processing, 2002. ICONIP '02. Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
981-04-7524-1
DOI :
10.1109/ICONIP.2002.1202158