Fitting Segmentation Networks on Varying Image Resolutions Using Splatting

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Abstract

Data used in image segmentation are not always defined on the same grid. This is particularly true for medical images, where the resolution, field-of-view and orientation can differ across channels and subjects. Images and labels are therefore commonly resampled onto the same grid, as a pre-processing step. However, the resampling operation introduces partial volume effects and blurring, thereby changing the effective resolution and reducing the contrast between structures. In this paper we propose a splat layer, which automatically handles resolution mismatches in the input data. This layer pushes each image onto a mean space where the forward pass is performed. As the splat operator is the adjoint to the resampling operator, the mean-space prediction can be pulled back to the native label space, where the loss function is computed. Thus, the need for explicit resolution adjustment using interpolation is removed. We show on two publicly available datasets, with simulated and real multi-modal magnetic resonance images, that this model improves segmentation results compared to resampling as a pre-processing step.

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Brudfors, M., Balbastre, Y., Ashburner, J., Rees, G., Nachev, P., Ourselin, S., & Cardoso, M. J. (2022). Fitting Segmentation Networks on Varying Image Resolutions Using Splatting. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 13413 LNCS, pp. 271–282). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12053-4_21

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