Abstract

Accurately segmenting the hippocampus from magnetic resonance (MR) brain images is a crucial step in studying brain disorders. However, this task is challenging due to the low signal contrast of hippocampal images, the irregular shape, and small structural size of the hippocampi. In recent years, several deep convolutional networks have been proposed for hippocampus segmentation, which have achieved state-of-the-art performance. These methods typically use large image patches for training the network, as larger patches are beneficial for capturing long-range contextual information. However, this approach increases the computational burden and overlooks the significance of the boundary region. In this study, we propose a deep learning-based method for hippocampus segmentation with boundary region refinement. Our method involves two main steps. First, we propose a convolutional network that takes large image patches as input for initial segmentation. Then, we extract small image patches around the hippocampal boundary for training the second convolutional neural network, which refines the segmentation in the boundary regions. We validate our proposed method on a publicly available dataset and demonstrate that it significantly improves the performance of convolutional neural networks that use single-size image patches as input. In conclusion, our study proposes a novel method for hippocampus segmentation, which improves upon the current state-of-the-art methods. By incorporating a boundary refinement step, our approach achieves higher accuracy in hippocampus segmentation and may facilitate research on brain disorders.

Full Text
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