4.7 Article

Registration of Anatomical Images Using Paths of Diffeomorphisms Parameterized with Stationary Vector Field Flows

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER VISION
Volume 85, Issue 3, Pages 291-306

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11263-009-0219-z

Keywords

Computational Anatomy; LDDMM; Efficient; Diffeomorphic registration; Infinite dimensional; Riemannian manifold; Stationary parameterization

Funding

  1. MEC [TEC2006-13966-C03-02]
  2. FIS [PI04/1795]

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Computational Anatomy aims for the study of variability in anatomical structures from images. Variability is encoded by the spatial transformations existing between anatomical images and a template selected as reference. In the absence of a more justified model for inter-subject variability, transformations are considered to belong to a convenient family of diffeomorphisms which provides a suitable mathematical setting for the analysis of anatomical variability. One of the proposed paradigms for diffeomorphic registration is the Large Deformation Diffeomorphic Metric Mapping (LDDMM). In this framework, transformations are characterized as end points of paths parameterized by time-varying flows of vector fields defined on the tangent space of a Riemannian manifold of diffeomorphisms and computed from the solution of the non-stationary transport equation associated to these flows. With this characterization, optimization in LDDMM is performed on the space of non-stationary vector field flows resulting into a time and memory consuming algorithm. Recently, an alternative characterization of paths of diffeomorphisms based on constant-time flows of vector fields has been proposed in the literature. With this parameterization, diffeomorphisms constitute solutions of stationary ODEs. In this article, the stationary parameterization is included for diffeomorphic registration in the LDDMM framework. We formulate the variational problem related to this registration scenario and derive the associated Euler-Lagrange equations. Moreover, the performance of the non-stationary vs the stationary parameterizations in real and simulated 3D-MRI brain datasets is evaluated. Compared to the non-stationary parameterization, our proposal provides similar results in terms of image matching and local differences between the diffeomorphic transformations while drastically reducing memory and time requirements.

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