Abstract

Brain extraction is a critical pre-processing step in brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analytical pipelines. In rodents, this is often achieved by manually editing brain masks slice-by- slice, a time-consuming task where workloads increase with higher spatial resolution datasets. We recently demonstrated successful automatic brain extraction via a deep-learning-based framework, U-Net, using 2D convolutions. However, such an approach cannot make use of the rich 3D spatial- context information from volumetric MRI data. In this study, we advanced our previously proposed U-Net architecture by replacing all 2D operations with their 3D counterparts and created a 3D U-Net framework. We trained and validated our model using a recently released CAMRI rat brain database acquired at isotropic spatial resolution, including T2-weighted turbo-spin-echo structural MRI and T2*-weighted echo-planar-imaging functional MRI. The performance of our 3D U-Net model was compared with existing rodent brain extraction tools, including Rapid Automatic Tissue Segmentation (RATS), Pulse-Coupled Neural Network (PCNN), SHape descriptor selected External Regions after Morphologically filtering (SHERM), and our previously proposed 2D U-Net model. 3D U-Net demonstrated superior performance in Dice, Jaccard, center-of-mass distance, Hausdorff distance, and sensitivity. Additionally, we demonstrated the reliability of 3D U-Net under various noise levels, evaluated the optimal training sample sizes, and disseminated all source codes publicly, with a hope that this approach will benefit rodent MRI research community.

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