PATCH BASED INTENSITY NORMALIZATION OF BRAIN MR IMAGES

Proc IEEE Int Symp Biomed Imaging. 2013 Dec 31:2013:342-345. doi: 10.1109/ISBI.2013.6556482.

Abstract

Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (MRI) is widely used to study the structure of human brains. Unlike computed tomography (CT), MR image intensities do not have a tissue specific interpretation. Thus images of the same subject obtained with either the same imaging sequence on different scanners or with differing parameters have widely varying intensity scales. This inconsistency introduces errors in segmentation, and other image processing tasks, thus necessitating image intensity standardization. Compared to previous intensity normalization methods using histogram transformations-which try to find a global one-to-one intensity mapping based on histograms-we propose a patch based generative model for intensity normalization between images acquired under different scanners or different pulse sequence parameters. Our method outperforms histogram based methods when normalizing phantoms simulated with various parameters. Additionally, experiments on real data, acquired under a variety of scanners and acquisition parameters, have more consistent segmentations after our normalization.

Keywords: MRI; brain; intensity normalization; intensity standardization; segmentation.