Title :
Hybrid boundary-medial shape description for biologically variable shapes
Author :
Styner, Martin ; Gerig, Guido
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., North Carolina Univ., Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Abstract :
Knowledge about the biological variability of anatomical objects is essential for statistical shape analysis and a discrimination between healthy and pathological structures. This paper describes ongoing research on a novel approach that incorporates variability of a training set into the generation of a characteristic 3D shape model. The proposed shape representation is a hybrid of a fine-scale global boundary description and a coarse-scale local medial description. The hybrid overcomes inherent limitations of pure medial based or pure boundary based descriptions. The medial description composed of a net of medial primitives (M-rep) with fixed graph properties is derived from the shape space scanned by the major deformation eigenmodes of a boundary description based on spherical harmonic descriptors (SPHARM). The topology of the M-rep is determined by studying pruned 3D Voronoi skeletons in the given shape space. Shapes are characterized by its SPHARM descriptors and an individually deformed M-rep model. The hybrid shape description gives an implicit correspondence on the boundary and on the medial manifold, thus enabling a more powerful statistical analysis
Keywords :
edge detection; medical image processing; shape measurement; statistical analysis; anatomical objects variability; biologically variable shapes; coarse-scale local medial description; fine-scale global boundary description; fixed graph properties; hybrid boundary-medial shape description; implicit correspondence; major deformation eigenmodes; medial manifold; medial primitives net; pruned 3D Voronoi skeletons; shape representation; spherical harmonic descriptors; Biological system modeling; Biology; Computer science; Deformable models; Humans; Pathology; Shape; Skeleton; Statistical analysis; Topology;
Conference_Titel :
Mathematical Methods in Biomedical Image Analysis, 2000. Proceedings. IEEE Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Hilton Head Island, SC
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0737-9
DOI :
10.1109/MMBIA.2000.852383