6533b86cfe1ef96bd12c8d88
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Computer-aided detection of cerebral microbleeds in susceptibility-weighted imaging.
Olivier SalvadoPaul YatesFabrice MeriaudeauAmir FazlollahiAmir FazlollahiLuca GiancardoVictor L. VillemagnePierrick BourgeatChristopher C. Rowesubject
Hessian matrixComputer sciencePosterior probabilityHealth InformaticsBlob detectionSensitivity and SpecificityPattern Recognition AutomatedMachine Learningsymbols.namesakeMinimum bounding boxBounding overwatchImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingComputer visionComputer SimulationReliability (statistics)Cerebral HemorrhageObserver VariationModels StatisticalRadiological and Ultrasound TechnologyRadon transformbusiness.industryReproducibility of ResultsPattern recognitionImage EnhancementComputer Graphics and Computer-Aided DesignRandom forestDiffusion Magnetic Resonance ImagingData Interpretation StatisticalsymbolsComputer Vision and Pattern RecognitionArtificial intelligencebusinessAlgorithmsMagnetic Resonance Angiographydescription
Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) is recognized as the preferred MRI technique for visualizing cerebral vasculature and related pathologies such as cerebral microbleeds (CMBs). Manual identification of CMBs is time-consuming, has limited reliability and reproducibility, and is prone to misinterpretation. In this paper, a novel computer-aided microbleed detection technique based on machine learning is presented: First, spherical-like objects (potential CMB candidates) with their corresponding bounding boxes were detected using a novel multi-scale Laplacian of Gaussian technique. A set of robust 3-dimensional Radon- and Hessian-based shape descriptors within each bounding box were then extracted to train a cascade of binary random forests (RF). The cascade consists of consecutive independent RF classifiers with low to high posterior probability constraints to handle imbalanced training sets (CMBs and non-CMBs), and to progressively improve detection rates. The proposed method was validated on 66 subjects whose CMBs were manually stratified into "possible" and "definite" by two medical experts. The proposed technique achieved a sensitivity of 87% and an average false detection rate of 27.1 CMBs per subject on the "possible and definite" set. A sensitivity of 93% and false detection rate of 10 CMBs per subject was also achieved on the "definite" set. The proposed automated approach outperforms state of the art methods, and promises to enhance manual expert screening. Benefits include improved reliability, minimization of intra-rater variability and a reduction in assessment time.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-12-30 | Computerized medical imaging and graphics : the official journal of the Computerized Medical Imaging Society |