Analyzing multi-fiber reconstruction in high angular resolution diffusion imaging using the tensor distribution function


Autoria(s): Zhan, L.; Leow, A. D.; Zhu, S.; Chiang, M. C.; Barysheva, M.; Toga, A. W.; McMahon, K. L.; de Zubicaray, G. I.; Wright, M. J.; Thompson, P. M.
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

High-angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) can reconstruct fiber pathways in the brain with extraordinary detail, identifying anatomical features and connections not seen with conventional MRI. HARDI overcomes several limitations of standard diffusion tensor imaging, which fails to model diffusion correctly in regions where fibers cross or mix. As HARDI can accurately resolve sharp signal peaks in angular space where fibers cross, we studied how many gradients are required in practice to compute accurate orientation density functions, to better understand the tradeoff between longer scanning times and more angular precision. We computed orientation density functions analytically from tensor distribution functions (TDFs) which model the HARDI signal at each point as a unit-mass probability density on the 6D manifold of symmetric positive definite tensors. In simulated two-fiber systems with varying Rician noise, we assessed how many diffusionsensitized gradients were sufficient to (1) accurately resolve the diffusion profile, and (2) measure the exponential isotropy (EI), a TDF-derived measure of fiber integrity that exploits the full multidirectional HARDI signal. At lower SNR, the reconstruction accuracy, measured using the Kullback-Leibler divergence, rapidly increased with additional gradients, and EI estimation accuracy plateaued at around 70 gradients.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/85863/

Publicador

IEEE

Relação

DOI:10.1109/ISBI.2009.5193328

Zhan, L., Leow, A. D., Zhu, S., Chiang, M. C., Barysheva, M., Toga, A. W., McMahon, K. L., de Zubicaray, G. I., Wright, M. J., & Thompson, P. M. (2009) Analyzing multi-fiber reconstruction in high angular resolution diffusion imaging using the tensor distribution function. In 2009 6th IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging: From Nano to Macro Proceedings, IEEE, Boston, MA, pp. 1402-1405.

Direitos

Copyright 2009 IEEE

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #Exponential isotropy #High angular resolution diffusion imaging #Kullback-Leibler divergence #Multi-fiber construction #Tensor distribution function
Tipo

Conference Paper