Title : 
Diffusion Tensor Analysis With Invariant Gradients and Rotation Tangents
         
        
            Author : 
Kindlmann, Gordon ; Ennis, Daniel B. ; Whitaker, Ross T. ; Westin, Carl-Fredrik
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
Harvard Med. Sch., Cambridge
         
        
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
Guided by empirically established connections between clinically important tissue properties and diffusion tensor parameters, we introduce a framework for decomposing variations in diffusion tensors into changes in shape and orientation. Tensor shape and orientation both have three degrees-of-freedom, spanned by invariant gradients and rotation tangents, respectively. As an initial demonstration of the framework, we create a tunable measure of tensor difference that can selectively respond to shape and orientation. Second, to analyze the spatial gradient in a tensor volume (a third-order tensor), our framework generates edge strength measures that can discriminate between different neuroanatomical boundaries, as well as creating a novel detector of white matter tracts that are adjacent yet distinctly oriented. Finally, we apply the framework to decompose the fourth-order diffusion covariance tensor into individual and aggregate measures of shape and orientation covariance, including a direct approximation for the variance of tensor invariants such as fractional anisotropy.
         
        
            Keywords : 
biological tissues; biomedical imaging; medical image processing; tensors; degrees-of-freedom; diffusion covariance tensor; fractional anisotropy; invariant gradients; neuroanatomical boundaries; rotation tangents; tensor orientation; tensor shape; tissue properties; Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); diffusion tensor MRI; fourth-order covariance tensor; tensor feature detection; tensor invariants; third-order gradient tensor; Algorithms; Brain; Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Humans; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Reproducibility of Results; Rotation; Sensitivity and Specificity;
         
        
        
            Journal_Title : 
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
         
        
        
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/TMI.2007.907277