Abstract

AbstractDiagnosis using medical images helps doctors detect diseases and treat patients effectively. A system that segments objects automatically from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) plays an important role when doctors diagnose injuries and brain diseases. This article presents a method for automatic brain, scalp, and skull segmentation from MRI that uses Bitplane and the Adaptive Fast Marching method (FMM). We focus on the segmentation of these tissues, especially the brain, because they are the essential objects, and their segmentation is the first step in the segmentation of other tissues. First, the type of each slice is set based on the shape of the brain, and the head region is segmented by removing its background. Second, the sure region and the unsure region are segmented based on the Bitplane method. Finally, this work proposes an approach for classification that is based on the Adaptive FMM. This approach is evaluated with the BrainWeb and Neurodevelopmental MRI databases and compared with other methods. The Dice Averages for brain, scalp, and skull segmentation are 96%, 80%, and 93%, respectively, on the BrainWeb database and 91%, 67%, and 80%, respectively, on the Neurodevelopmental MRI database.

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