Frayne, Richard
MedShapeNet -- A Large-Scale Dataset of 3D Medical Shapes for Computer Vision
Li, Jianning, Zhou, Zongwei, Yang, Jiancheng, Pepe, Antonio, Gsaxner, Christina, Luijten, Gijs, Qu, Chongyu, Zhang, Tiezheng, Chen, Xiaoxi, Li, Wenxuan, Wodzinski, Marek, Friedrich, Paul, Xie, Kangxian, Jin, Yuan, Ambigapathy, Narmada, Nasca, Enrico, Solak, Naida, Melito, Gian Marco, Vu, Viet Duc, Memon, Afaque R., Schlachta, Christopher, De Ribaupierre, Sandrine, Patel, Rajnikant, Eagleson, Roy, Chen, Xiaojun, Mächler, Heinrich, Kirschke, Jan Stefan, de la Rosa, Ezequiel, Christ, Patrick Ferdinand, Li, Hongwei Bran, Ellis, David G., Aizenberg, Michele R., Gatidis, Sergios, Küstner, Thomas, Shusharina, Nadya, Heller, Nicholas, Andrearczyk, Vincent, Depeursinge, Adrien, Hatt, Mathieu, Sekuboyina, Anjany, Löffler, Maximilian, Liebl, Hans, Dorent, Reuben, Vercauteren, Tom, Shapey, Jonathan, Kujawa, Aaron, Cornelissen, Stefan, Langenhuizen, Patrick, Ben-Hamadou, Achraf, Rekik, Ahmed, Pujades, Sergi, Boyer, Edmond, Bolelli, Federico, Grana, Costantino, Lumetti, Luca, Salehi, Hamidreza, Ma, Jun, Zhang, Yao, Gharleghi, Ramtin, Beier, Susann, Sowmya, Arcot, Garza-Villarreal, Eduardo A., Balducci, Thania, Angeles-Valdez, Diego, Souza, Roberto, Rittner, Leticia, Frayne, Richard, Ji, Yuanfeng, Ferrari, Vincenzo, Chatterjee, Soumick, Dubost, Florian, Schreiber, Stefanie, Mattern, Hendrik, Speck, Oliver, Haehn, Daniel, John, Christoph, Nürnberger, Andreas, Pedrosa, João, Ferreira, Carlos, Aresta, Guilherme, Cunha, António, Campilho, Aurélio, Suter, Yannick, Garcia, Jose, Lalande, Alain, Vandenbossche, Vicky, Van Oevelen, Aline, Duquesne, Kate, Mekhzoum, Hamza, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Audenaert, Emmanuel, Krebs, Claudia, van Leeuwen, Timo, Vereecke, Evie, Heidemeyer, Hauke, Röhrig, Rainer, Hölzle, Frank, Badeli, Vahid, Krieger, Kathrin, Gunzer, Matthias, Chen, Jianxu, van Meegdenburg, Timo, Dada, Amin, Balzer, Miriam, Fragemann, Jana, Jonske, Frederic, Rempe, Moritz, Malorodov, Stanislav, Bahnsen, Fin H., Seibold, Constantin, Jaus, Alexander, Marinov, Zdravko, Jaeger, Paul F., Stiefelhagen, Rainer, Santos, Ana Sofia, Lindo, Mariana, Ferreira, André, Alves, Victor, Kamp, Michael, Abourayya, Amr, Nensa, Felix, Hörst, Fabian, Brehmer, Alexander, Heine, Lukas, Hanusrichter, Yannik, Weßling, Martin, Dudda, Marcel, Podleska, Lars E., Fink, Matthias A., Keyl, Julius, Tserpes, Konstantinos, Kim, Moon-Sung, Elhabian, Shireen, Lamecker, Hans, Zukić, Dženan, Paniagua, Beatriz, Wachinger, Christian, Urschler, Martin, Duong, Luc, Wasserthal, Jakob, Hoyer, Peter F., Basu, Oliver, Maal, Thomas, Witjes, Max J. H., Schiele, Gregor, Chang, Ti-chiun, Ahmadi, Seyed-Ahmad, Luo, Ping, Menze, Bjoern, Reyes, Mauricio, Deserno, Thomas M., Davatzikos, Christos, Puladi, Behrus, Fua, Pascal, Yuille, Alan L., Kleesiek, Jens, Egger, Jan
Prior to the deep learning era, shape was commonly used to describe the objects. Nowadays, state-of-the-art (SOTA) algorithms in medical imaging are predominantly diverging from computer vision, where voxel grids, meshes, point clouds, and implicit surface models are used. This is seen from numerous shape-related publications in premier vision conferences as well as the growing popularity of ShapeNet (about 51,300 models) and Princeton ModelNet (127,915 models). For the medical domain, we present a large collection of anatomical shapes (e.g., bones, organs, vessels) and 3D models of surgical instrument, called MedShapeNet, created to facilitate the translation of data-driven vision algorithms to medical applications and to adapt SOTA vision algorithms to medical problems. As a unique feature, we directly model the majority of shapes on the imaging data of real patients. As of today, MedShapeNet includes 23 dataset with more than 100,000 shapes that are paired with annotations (ground truth). Our data is freely accessible via a web interface and a Python application programming interface (API) and can be used for discriminative, reconstructive, and variational benchmarks as well as various applications in virtual, augmented, or mixed reality, and 3D printing. Exemplary, we present use cases in the fields of classification of brain tumors, facial and skull reconstructions, multi-class anatomy completion, education, and 3D printing. In future, we will extend the data and improve the interfaces. The project pages are: https://medshapenet.ikim.nrw/ and https://github.com/Jianningli/medshapenet-feedback
SF2Former: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Identification From Multi-center MRI Data Using Spatial and Frequency Fusion Transformer
Kushol, Rafsanjany, Luk, Collin C., Dey, Avyarthana, Benatar, Michael, Briemberg, Hannah, Dionne, Annie, Dupré, Nicolas, Frayne, Richard, Genge, Angela, Gibson, Summer, Graham, Simon J., Korngut, Lawrence, Seres, Peter, Welsh, Robert C., Wilman, Alan, Zinman, Lorne, Kalra, Sanjay, Yang, Yee-Hong
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder involving motor neuron degeneration. Significant research has begun to establish brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a potential biomarker to diagnose and monitor the state of the disease. Deep learning has turned into a prominent class of machine learning programs in computer vision and has been successfully employed to solve diverse medical image analysis tasks. However, deep learning-based methods applied to neuroimaging have not achieved superior performance in ALS patients classification from healthy controls due to having insignificant structural changes correlated with pathological features. Therefore, the critical challenge in deep models is to determine useful discriminative features with limited training data. By exploiting the long-range relationship of image features, this study introduces a framework named SF2Former that leverages vision transformer architecture's power to distinguish the ALS subjects from the control group. To further improve the network's performance, spatial and frequency domain information are combined because MRI scans are captured in the frequency domain before being converted to the spatial domain. The proposed framework is trained with a set of consecutive coronal 2D slices, which uses the pre-trained weights on ImageNet by leveraging transfer learning. Finally, a majority voting scheme has been employed to those coronal slices of a particular subject to produce the final classification decision. Our proposed architecture has been thoroughly assessed with multi-modal neuroimaging data using two well-organized versions of the Canadian ALS Neuroimaging Consortium (CALSNIC) multi-center datasets. The experimental results demonstrate the superiority of our proposed strategy in terms of classification accuracy compared with several popular deep learning-based techniques.
Multi-channel MR Reconstruction (MC-MRRec) Challenge -- Comparing Accelerated MR Reconstruction Models and Assessing Their Genereralizability to Datasets Collected with Different Coils
Beauferris, Youssef, Teuwen, Jonas, Karkalousos, Dimitrios, Moriakov, Nikita, Caan, Mattha, Rodrigues, Lívia, Lopes, Alexandre, Pedrini, Hélio, Rittner, Letícia, Dannecker, Maik, Studenyak, Viktor, Gröger, Fabian, Vyas, Devendra, Faghih-Roohi, Shahrooz, Jethi, Amrit Kumar, Raju, Jaya Chandra, Sivaprakasam, Mohanasankar, Loos, Wallace, Frayne, Richard, Souza, Roberto
The 2020 Multi-channel Magnetic Resonance Reconstruction (MC-MRRec) Challenge had two primary goals: 1) compare different MR image reconstruction models on a large dataset and 2) assess the generalizability of these models to datasets acquired with a different number of receiver coils (i.e., multiple channels). The challenge had two tracks: Track 01 focused on assessing models trained and tested with 12-channel data. Track 02 focused on assessing models trained with 12-channel data and tested on both 12-channel and 32-channel data. While the challenge is ongoing, here we describe the first edition of the challenge and summarise submissions received prior to 5 September 2020. Track 01 had five baseline models and received four independent submissions. Track 02 had two baseline models and received two independent submissions. This manuscript provides relevant comparative information on the current state-of-the-art of MR reconstruction and highlights the challenges of obtaining generalizable models that are required prior to clinical adoption. Both challenge tracks remain open and will provide an objective performance assessment for future submissions. Subsequent editions of the challenge are proposed to investigate new concepts and strategies, such as the integration of potentially available longitudinal information during the MR reconstruction process. An outline of the proposed second edition of the challenge is presented in this manuscript.
A Hybrid Frequency-domain/Image-domain Deep Network for Magnetic Resonance Image Reconstruction
Souza, Roberto, Frayne, Richard
Decreasing magnetic resonance (MR) image acquisition times can potentially reduce procedural cost and make MR examinations more accessible. Compressed sensing (CS)-based image reconstruction methods, for example, decrease MR acquisition time by reconstructing high-quality images from data that were originally sampled at rates inferior to the Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem. In this work we propose a hybrid architecture that works both in the k-space (or frequency-domain) and the image (or spatial) domains. Our network is composed of a complex-valued residual U-net in the k-space domain, an inverse Fast Fourier Transform (iFFT) operation, and a real-valued U-net in the image domain. Our experiments demonstrated, using MR raw k-space data, that the proposed hybrid approach can potentially improve CS reconstruction compared to deep-learning networks that operate only in the image domain. In this study we compare our method with four previously published deep neural networks and examine their ability to reconstruct images that are subsequently used to generate regional volume estimates. We evaluated undersampling ratios of 75% and 80%. Our technique was ranked second in the quantitative analysis, but qualitative analysis indicated that our reconstruction performed the best in hard to reconstruct regions, such as the cerebellum. All images reconstructed with our method were successfully post-processed, and showed good volumetry agreement compared with the fully sampled reconstruction measures.