DocumentCode :
1499752
Title :
Retrospective intermodality registration techniques for images of the head: surface-based versus volume-based
Author :
West, Jay ; Fitzpatrick, J. Michael ; Wang, Matthew Y. ; Dawant, Benoit M. ; Maurer, Calvin R., Jr. ; Kessler, Robert M. ; Maciunas, Robert J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, TN, USA
Volume :
18
Issue :
2
fYear :
1999
Firstpage :
144
Lastpage :
150
Abstract :
A blinded evaluation of two groups of retrospective image registration techniques was performed using as a gold standard a prospective marker-based registration method, and we compared the performance of one group with the other. By grouping the techniques as volume-based or surface-based, we could make some interesting conclusions. In order to ensure blindness, all retrospective registrations were performed by participants who had no knowledge of the gold-standard results until after their results had been submitted. Image volumes of three modalities (X-ray CT, MRI and PET) were obtained from patients undergoing neurosurgery on whom bone-implanted fiducial markers were mounted. These volumes had all traces of the markers removed and were provided via the Internet to outside collaborators, who then performed retrospective registrations on the volumes, calculating transformations from CT to MRI and/or from PET to MRI. The accuracy of each registration was then evaluated. The accuracy is measured at multiple volumes of interest. The volume-based techniques in this study tended to give substantially more accurate and reliable results than the surface-based ones for the CT-to-MRI registration tasks, and slightly more accurate results for the PET-to-MRI tasks. Analysis of these results revealed that the rotational component of error was more pronounced for the surface-based group. It was also apparent that all of the registration techniques we examined have the potential to produce satisfactory results much of the time, but that visual inspection is necessary to guard against large errors.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; computerised tomography; image registration; inspection; medical image processing; positron emission tomography; CT-to-MRI transformation; Internet; PET-to-MRI transformation; X-ray computed tomography; blinded evaluation; bone-implanted fiducial markers; error rotational component; gold standard; head images; image volumes; magnetic resonance imaging; neurosurgery; outside collaborators; performance; positron emission tomography; prospective marker-based registration method; registration accuracy evaluation; retrospective intermodality image registration techniques; surface-based techniques; visual inspection; volume-based techniques; volumes of interest; Blindness; Computed tomography; Gold; Head; Image registration; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neurosurgery; Performance evaluation; Positron emission tomography; X-ray imaging; Algorithms; Head; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Reproducibility of Results; Retrospective Studies; Tomography, Emission-Computed; Tomography, X-Ray Computed;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0278-0062
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/42.759119
Filename :
759119
Link To Document :
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