DABS-LS: Deep Atlas-Based Segmentation Using Regional Level Set Self-Supervision

16 Feb 2024  ·  Hannah G. Mason, Jack H. Noble ·

Cochlear implants (CIs) are neural prosthetics used to treat patients with severe-to-profound hearing loss. Patient-specific modeling of CI stimulation of the auditory nerve fiber (ANFs) can help audiologists improve the CI programming. These models require localization of the ANFs relative to surrounding anatomy and the CI. Localization is challenging because the ANFs are so small they are not directly visible in clinical imaging. In this work, we hypothesize the position of the ANFs can be accurately inferred from the location of the internal auditory canal (IAC), which has high contrast in CT, since the ANFs pass through this canal between the cochlea and the brain. Inspired by VoxelMorph, in this paper we propose a deep atlas-based IAC segmentation network. We create a single atlas in which the IAC and ANFs are pre-localized. Our network is trained to produce deformation fields (DFs) mapping coordinates from the atlas to new target volumes and that accurately segment the IAC. We hypothesize that DFs that accurately segment the IAC in target images will also facilitate accurate atlas-based localization of the ANFs. As opposed to VoxelMorph, which aims to produce DFs that accurately register the entire volume, our novel contribution is an entirely self-supervised training scheme that aims to produce DFs that accurately segment the target structure. This self-supervision is facilitated using a regional level set (LS) inspired loss function. We call our method Deep Atlas Based Segmentation using Level Sets (DABS-LS). Results show that DABS-LS outperforms VoxelMorph for IAC segmentation. Tests with publicly available datasets for trachea and kidney segmentation also show significant improvement in segmentation accuracy, demonstrating the generalizability of the method.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Datasets


Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here