Semi-supervised deep learning of brain tissue segmentation.

Journal: Neural networks : the official journal of the International Neural Network Society
PMID:

Abstract

Brain image segmentation is of great importance not only for clinical use but also for neuroscience research. Recent developments in deep neural networks (DNNs) have led to the application of DNNs to brain image segmentation, which required extensive human annotations of whole brain images. Annotating three-dimensional brain images requires laborious efforts by expert anatomists because of the differences among images in terms of their dimensionality, noise, contrast, or ambiguous boundaries that even prevent these experts from necessarily attaining consistency. This paper proposes a semi-supervised learning framework to train a DNN based on a relatively small number of annotated (labeled) images, named atlases, but also a relatively large number of unlabeled images by leveraging image registration to attach pseudo-labels to images that were originally unlabeled. We applied our proposed method to two different datasets: open human brain images and our original marmoset brain images. When provided with the same number of atlases for training, we found our method achieved superior and more stable segmentation results than those by existing registration-based and DNN-based methods.

Authors

  • Ryo Ito
    Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Yoshida-honmachi, Kyoto, 606-8501, Japan.
  • Ken Nakae
    Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Yoshida-honmachi, Kyoto, 606-8501, Japan.
  • Junichi Hata
    Department of Physiology, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, 160-8582, Japan; Laboratory for Marmoset Neural Architecture, RIKEN Center for Brain Science, Wako-shi, Saitama, 351-0198, Japan.
  • Hideyuki Okano
    Department of Physiology, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, 160-8582, Japan; Laboratory for Marmoset Neural Architecture, RIKEN Center for Brain Science, Wako-shi, Saitama, 351-0198, Japan.
  • Shin Ishii
    Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Yoshida-Honmachi, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto, 606-8501, Japan.