Scalp surface estimation and head registration using sparse sampling and 3D statistical models

Oded Schlesinger, Raj Kundu, Dmitry Isaev, Jessica Y. Choi, Stefan M. Goetz, Dennis A. Turner, Guillermo Sapiro, Angel V. Peterchev, J. Matias Di Martino

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Registering the head and estimating the scalp surface are important for various biomedical procedures, including those using neuronavigation to localize brain stimulation or recording. However, neuronavigation systems rely on manually-identified fiducial head targets and often require a patient-specific MRI for accurate registration, limiting adoption. We propose a practical technique capable of inferring the scalp shape and use it to accurately register the subject's head. Our method does not require anatomical landmark annotation or an individual MRI scan, yet achieves accurate registration of the subject's head and estimation of its surface. The scalp shape is estimated from surface samples easily acquired using existing pointer tools, and registration exploits statistical head model priors. Our method allows for the acquisition of non-trivial shapes from a limited number of data points while leveraging their object class priors, surpassing the accuracy of common reconstruction and registration methods using the same tools. The proposed approach is evaluated in a virtual study with head MRI data from 1152 subjects, achieving an average reconstruction root-mean-square error of 2.95 mm, which outperforms a common neuronavigation technique by 2.70 mm. We also characterize the error under different conditions and provide guidelines for efficient sampling. Furthermore, we demonstrate and validate the proposed method on data from 50 subjects collected with conventional neuronavigation tools and setup, obtaining an average root-mean-square error of 2.89 mm; adding landmark-based registration improves this error to 2.63 mm. The simulation and experimental results support the proposed method's effectiveness with or without landmark annotation, highlighting its broad applicability.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number108689
JournalComputers in Biology and Medicine
Volume178
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2024
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Health Informatics
  • Computer Science Applications

Keywords

  • 3D morphable model
  • EEG
  • Joint optimization
  • Neuronavigation
  • Shape estimation
  • Shape registration
  • Sparse sampling
  • TMS

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