Abstract
Background:
Tractography uses diffusion magnetic resonance imaging to noninvasively infer the macroscopic pathways of white matter fibers and it is the only available technique to probe in vivo the structural connectivity of the brain. However, despite this unique and compelling ability and its wide range of possible neurological applications, tractography is still limited, lacks anatomical precision, and suffers from a serious sensitivity/specificity trade-off. For this reason, in the past few years, tractography postprocessing techniques have emerged and proved effective for improving the quality of the reconstructions. Among them, the Convex Optimization Modeling for Microstructure Informed Tractography formulation allows incorporating the anatomical prior that fibers are naturally organized in fascicles, and has obtained exceptional results in increasing the accuracy of the estimated tractograms.
Methods:
We propose an extension to this idea and introduce a multilevel grouping of the streamlines to capture the white matter arrangement in fascicles and subfascicles. We tested our proposed formulation in synthetic and in vivo data.
Results:
Our experiments show that using multiple levels allows considering information about the white matter organization more adequately and helps to improve further the accuracy of the resulting tractograms.
Conclusion:
This new formulation represents a further important step toward a more accurate structural connectivity estimation.
Impact statement
Tractography is an invaluable tool for studying noninvasively the neuronal architecture of the brain, but recent studies have shown that the presence of a large number of false positives can significantly bias any connectivity analysis. Recently, a filtering technique called Convex Optimization Modeling for Microstructure Informed Tractography (COMMIT)-2 has proven particularly effective in dramatically reducing their incidence by considering the prior knowledge that white matter fibers are organized in fascicles. In this work, we propose an extension to this method, which allows us to increase further the anatomical accuracy of tractography reconstructions. Our new formulation represents an additional step forward toward a more veridical characterization of brain connectivity.
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Supplementary Material
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