Author
Listed:
- Thomas Durantel
- Gabriel Girard
- Emmanuel Caruyer
- Olivier Commowick
- Julie Coloigner
Abstract
Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) tractography is a powerful approach to study brain structural connectivity. However, its reliability in a clinical context is still highly debated. Recent studies have shown that most classical algorithms achieve to recover the majority of existing true bundles. However, the generated tractograms contain many invalid bundles. This is due to the crossing fibers and bottleneck problems which increase the number of false positive fibers. In this work, we proposed to overpass this limitation with a novel method to guide the algorithms in those challenging regions with prior knowledge of the anatomy. We developed a method to create a combination of anatomical prior applicable to any orientation distribution function (ODF)-based tractography algorithms. The proposed method captures the tract orientation distribution (TOD) from an atlas of segmented fiber bundles and incorporates it during the tracking process, using a Riemannian framework. We tested the prior incorporation method on two ODF-based state-of-the-art algorithms, iFOD2 and Trekker PTT, on the diffusion-simulated connectivity (DiSCo) dataset and on the Human Connectome Project (HCP) data. We also compared our method with two bundles priors generated by the bundle specific tractography (BST) method. We showed that our method improves the overall spatial coverage and connectivity of a tractogram on the two datasets, especially in crossing fiber regions. Moreover, the fiber reconstruction may be improved on clinical data, informed by prior extracted on high quality data, and therefore could help in the study of brain anatomy and function.
Suggested Citation
Thomas Durantel & Gabriel Girard & Emmanuel Caruyer & Olivier Commowick & Julie Coloigner, 2025.
"A Riemannian framework for incorporating white matter bundle prior in orientation distribution function based tractography algorithms,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 20(3), pages 1-20, March.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0304449
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304449
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