Learning and combining image neighborhoods using random forests for neonatal brain disease classification.

Journal: Medical image analysis
Published Date:

Abstract

It is challenging to characterize and classify normal and abnormal brain development during early childhood. To reduce the complexity of heterogeneous data population, manifold learning techniques are increasingly applied, which find a low-dimensional representation of the data, while preserving all relevant information. The neighborhood definition used for constructing manifold representations of the population is crucial for preserving the similarity structure and it is highly application dependent. The recently proposed neighborhood approximation forests learn a neighborhood structure in a dataset based on a user-defined distance. We propose a framework to learn multiple pairwise distances in a population of brain images and to combine them in an unsupervised manner optimally in a manifold learning step. Unlike other methods that only use a univariate distance measure, our method allows for a natural combination of multiple distances from heterogeneous sources. As a result, it yields a representation of the population that preserves the multiple distances. Furthermore, our method also selects the most predictive features associated with the distances. We evaluate our method in neonatal magnetic resonance images of three groups (term controls, patients affected by intrauterine growth restriction and mild isolated ventriculomegaly). We show that combining multiple distances related to the condition improves the overall characterization and classification of the three clinical groups compared to the use of single distances and classical unsupervised manifold learning.

Authors

  • Veronika A Zimmer
    Information and Communication Technologies Department, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain. Electronic address: veronika.zimmer@upf.edu.
  • Ben Glocker
    Kheiron Medical Technologies, London, UK.
  • Nadine Hahner
    Fetal i+D Fetal Medicine Research Center, BCNatal - Barcelona Center for Maternal-Fetal and Neonatal Medicine (Hospital Clínic and Hospital Sant Joan de Déu), IDIBAPS, University of Barcelona, Spain; Centre for Biomedical Research on Rare Diseases (CIBER-ER), Barcelona, Spain.
  • Elisenda Eixarch
    Fetal i+D Fetal Medicine Research Center, BCNatal - Barcelona Center for Maternal-Fetal and Neonatal Medicine (Hospital Clínic and Hospital Sant Joan de Déu), IDIBAPS, University of Barcelona, Spain; Centre for Biomedical Research on Rare Diseases (CIBER-ER), Barcelona, Spain.
  • Gerard Sanroma
    SIMBioSys, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.
  • Eduard Gratacós
    Fetal i+D Fetal Medicine Research Center, BCNatal - Barcelona Center for Maternal-Fetal and Neonatal Medicine (Hospital Clínic and Hospital Sant Joan de Déu), IDIBAPS, University of Barcelona, Spain; Centre for Biomedical Research on Rare Diseases (CIBER-ER), Barcelona, Spain.
  • Daniel Rueckert
    Biomedical Image Analysis (BioMedIA) Group, Department of Computing, Imperial College London, UK. Electronic address: d.rueckert@imperial.ac.uk.
  • Miguel Ángel González Ballester
    SIMBioSys, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; ICREA, Barcelona, Spain.
  • Gemma Piella
    Information and Communication Technologies Department, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.