Posted By: NITRC ADMIN - Oct 15, 2012
Tool/Resource: Neuroinformatics - The Journal
 

Abstract  
Clustering streamline fibers derived from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data into functionally meaningful bundles with group-wise correspondences across individuals and populations has been a fundamental step for tract-based analysis of white matter integrity and brain connectivity modeling. Many approaches of fiber clustering reported in the literature so far used geometric and/or anatomic information derived from structural MRI and/or DTI data only. In this paper, we take a novel, alternative multimodal approach of combining resting state fMRI (rsfMRI) and DTI data, and propose to use functional coherence as the criterion to guide the clustering of fibers derived from DTI tractography. Specifically, the functional coherence between two streamline fibers is defined as their rsfMRI time series’ correlations, and the affinity propagation (AP) algorithm is used to cluster DTI-derived streamline fibers into bundles. Currently, we use the corpus callosum (CC) fibers, which are the largest fiber bundle in the brain, as a test-bed for methodology development and validation. Our experimental results have shown that the proposed rsfMRI-guided fiber clustering method can achieve functionally homogeneous bundles that are reasonably consistent across individuals and populations, suggesting the close relationship between structural connectivity and brain function. The clustered fiber bundles were evaluated and validated via the benchmark data provided by task-based fMRI, via reproducibility studies, and via comparison with other methods. Finally, we have applied the proposed framework on a multimodal rsfMRI/DTI dataset of schizophrenia (SZ) and reproducible results were obtained.

  • Content Type Journal Article
  • Category Original Article
  • Pages 1-15
  • DOI 10.1007/s12021-012-9169-7
  • Authors
    • Bao Ge, School of Automation, Northwestern Polytechnic University, Xian, China
    • Lei Guo, School of Automation, Northwestern Polytechnic University, Xian, China
    • Tuo Zhang, School of Automation, Northwestern Polytechnic University, Xian, China
    • Xintao Hu, School of Automation, Northwestern Polytechnic University, Xian, China
    • Junwei Han, School of Automation, Northwestern Polytechnic University, Xian, China
    • Tianming Liu, Bioimaging Research Center, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA


Link to Original Article
RSS Feed Monitor in Slack
Latest News

This news item currently has no comments.