Semiautomatic segmentation of the cochlea using real-time volume rendering and regional adaptive snake modeling

被引:2
|
作者
Yoo S.K. [1 ]
Wang G. [1 ]
Rubinstein J.T. [1 ]
Vannier M.W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Medical Engineering, The College of Medicine, Yonsei University, Seoul
关键词
Cochlea; Real-time volume rendering; Segmentation; Snake modeling; Spiral computed tomography;
D O I
10.1007/s10278-001-0102-0
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The human cochlea in the inner ear is the organ of hearing. Segmentation is a prerequisite step for 3-dimensional modeling and analysis of the cochlea. It may have uses in the clinical practice of otolaryngology and neuroradiology, as well as for cochlear implant research. In this report, an interactive, semiautomatic, coarse-to-fine segmentation approach is developed on a personal computer with a real-time volume rendering board. In the coarse segmentation, parameters, including the intensity range and the volume of interest, are defined to roughly segment the cochlea through user interaction. In the fine segmentation, a regional adaptive snake model designed as a refining operator separates the cochlea from other anatomic structures. The combination of the image information and expert knowledge enables the deformation of the regional adaptive snake effectively to the cochlear boundary, whereas the real-time volume rendering provides users with direct 3-dimensional visual feedback to modify intermediate parameters and finalize the segmentation. The performance is tested using spiral computed tomography (CT) images of the temporal bone and compared with the seed point region growing with manual modification of the commercial Analyze software. Our method represents an optimal balance between the efficiency of automatic algorithm and the accuracy of manual work.
引用
收藏
页码:173 / 181
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Real-time adaptive background segmentation
    Butler, D
    Sridharan, S
    Bove, VM
    2003 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ACOUSTICS, SPEECH, AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, VOL III, PROCEEDINGS: IMAGE & MULTIDIMENSIONAL SIGNAL PROCESSING SIGNAL, PROCESSING EDUCATION, 2003, : 349 - 352
  • [22] Real-time adaptive background segmentation
    Butler, D
    Sridharan, S
    Bove, VM
    2003 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MULTIMEDIA AND EXPO, VOL III, PROCEEDINGS, 2003, : 341 - 344
  • [23] Adaptive color background modeling for real-time segmentation of video streams
    François, ARJ
    Medioni, GG
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON IMAGING SCIENCE, SYSTEMS, AND TECHNOLOGY, PROCEEDINGS, 1999, : 227 - 232
  • [24] Evaluation of a real-time direct volume rendering system
    DeBoer, M
    Hesser, J
    Gropl, A
    Gunther, T
    Poliwoda, C
    Reinhart, C
    Manner, R
    COMPUTERS & GRAPHICS, 1997, 21 (02) : 189 - 198
  • [25] Real-time flame simulation based on volume rendering
    Sun, Jin-guang
    Yang, Xin-nian
    Li, Yang
    Wang, Jun-tao
    MECHANICAL AND ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING III, PTS 1-5, 2012, 130-134 : 2643 - 2646
  • [26] Real-time volume rendering of MRCP: clinical applications
    Emanuele Neri
    Piero Boraschi
    Davide Caramella
    Giovanni Braccini
    Roberto Gigoni
    Mirco Cosottini
    Simone Lodovigi
    Carlo Bartolozzi
    Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology and Medicine, 2000, 10 (1) : 35 - 42
  • [27] REAL-TIME VOLUME RENDERING INTERACTION IN VIRTUAL REALITY
    Kalarat, Kosin
    Koomhin, Phanit
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY, 2019, 10 (07) : 1307 - 1314
  • [28] Real-Time Heterogeneous Volume Modelling and Rendering Environment
    Abdallah, Ali
    2018 19TH INTERNATIONAL ARAB CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (ACIT), 2018, : 27 - 33
  • [29] Surgical planning system with real-time volume rendering
    Loh, YC
    Teo, MY
    Ng, WS
    Sim, C
    Zou, QS
    Yeo, TT
    Sitoh, YY
    INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON MEDICAL IMAGING AND AUGMENTED REALITY, PROCEEDINGS, 2001, : 259 - 261
  • [30] Real-Time Volume Rendering by Network Image Transmission
    Myojoyama, A.
    Saitoh, H.
    WORLD CONGRESS ON MEDICAL PHYSICS AND BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING 2006, VOL 14, PTS 1-6, 2007, 14 : 2427 - +