Disease-specific probabilistic brain atlases

Paul Thompson, Michael S. Mega, Arthur W. Toga

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

Atlases of the human brain, in health and disease, provide a comprehensive framework for understanding brain structure and function. The complexity and variability of brain structure, especially in the gyral patterns of the human cortex, present challenges in creating standardized brain atlases that reflect the anatomy of a population. This paper introduces the concept of a population-based, disease-specific brain atlas that can reflect the unique anatomy and physiology of a particular clinical subpopulation. Based on well-characterized patient groups, disease-specific atlases contain thousands of structure models, composite maps, average templates, and visualizations of structural variability, asymmetry and group-specific differences. They correlate the structural, metabolic, molecular and histologic hallmarks of the disease. Rather than simply fusing information from multiple subjects and sources, new mathematical strategies are introduced to resolve group-specific features not apparent in individual scans. High-dimensional elastic mappings, based on covariant partial differential equations, are developed to encode patterns of cortical variation. In the resulting brain atlas, disease-specific features and regional asymmetries emerge that are not apparent in individual anatomies. The resulting probabilistic atlas can identify patterns of altered structure and function, and can guide algorithms for knowledge-based image analysis, automated image labeling, tissue classification, data mining and functional image analysis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages227-234
Number of pages8
StatePublished - 2000
Externally publishedYes
EventMMBIA-2000: IEEE Workshop on Mathematical Methods in Biomedical Image Analysis - Hilton Head Island, SC, USA
Duration: 11 Jun 200012 Jun 2000

Conference

ConferenceMMBIA-2000: IEEE Workshop on Mathematical Methods in Biomedical Image Analysis
CityHilton Head Island, SC, USA
Period11/06/0012/06/00

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