Tree Topology Estimation.

Journal: IEEE transactions on pattern analysis and machine intelligence
PMID:

Abstract

Tree-like structures are fundamental in nature, and it is often useful to reconstruct the topology of a tree - what connects to what - from a two-dimensional image of it. However, the projected branches often cross in the image: the tree projects to a planar graph, and the inverse problem of reconstructing the topology of the tree from that of the graph is ill-posed. We regularize this problem with a generative, parametric tree-growth model. Under this model, reconstruction is possible in linear time if one knows the direction of each edge in the graph - which edge endpoint is closer to the root of the tree - but becomes NP-hard if the directions are not known. For the latter case, we present a heuristic search algorithm to estimate the most likely topology of a rooted, three-dimensional tree from a single two-dimensional image. Experimental results on retinal vessel, plant root, and synthetic tree data sets show that our methodology is both accurate and efficient.

Authors

  • Rolando Estrada
  • Carlo Tomasi
  • Scott C Schmidler
  • Sina Farsiu
    Department of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.