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Concordia Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Class imbalance should not throw you off balance: Choosing the right classifiers and performance metrics for brain decoding with imbalanced data Thölke P; Mantilla-Ramos YJ; Abdelhedi H; Maschke C; Dehgan A; Harel Y; Kemtur A; Mekki Berrada L; Sahraoui M; Young T; Bellemare Pépin A; El Khantour C; Landry M; Pascarella A; Hadid V; Combrisson E; O' Byrne J; Jerbi K; 37385392
IMAGING
2 A dataset of multi-contrast unbiased average MRI templates of a Parkinson's disease population Madge V; Fonov VS; Xiao Y; Zou L; Jackson C; Postuma RB; Dagher A; Fon EA; Collins DL; 37213552
IMAGING
3 Primary and Secondary Progressive Aphasia in Posterior Cortical Atrophy Brodeur C; Belley É; Deschênes LM; Enriquez-Rosas A; Hubert M; Guimond A; Bilodeau J; Soucy JP; Macoir J; 35629330
IMAGING
4 Associations of the BDNF Val66Met Polymorphism With Body Composition, Cardiometabolic Risk Factors, and Energy Intake in Youth With Obesity: Findings From the HEARTY Study Goldfield GS; Walsh J; Sigal RJ; Kenny GP; Hadjiyannakis S; De Lisio M; Ngu M; Prud' homme D; Alberga AS; Doucette S; Goldfield DB; Cameron JD; 34867148
IMAGING
5 The BigBrainWarp toolbox for integration of BigBrain 3D histology with multimodal neuroimaging Paquola C; Royer J; Lewis LB; Lepage C; Glatard T; Wagstyl K; DeKraker J; Toussaint PJ; Valk SL; Collins DL; Khan A; Amunts K; Evans AC; Dickscheid T; Bernhardt BC; 34431476
IMAGING
6 Lateral Position-Dependent Velocity Estimation Error in Plane-Wave Doppler Ultrasound Systems Wei L; Williams R; Loupas T; Helfield B; Burns PN; 34006440
IMAGING
7 Tools and Techniques for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)/COVID-19 Detection Safiabadi Tali SH; LeBlanc JJ; Sadiq Z; Oyewunmi OD; Camargo C; Nikpour B; Armanfard N; Sagan SM; Jahanshahi-Anbuhi S; 33980687
IMAGING
8 Comparing perturbation models for evaluating stability of neuroimaging pipelines. Kiar G, de Oliveira Castro P, Rioux P, Petit E, Brown ST, Evans AC, Glatard T 32831546
IMAGING
9 Two-stage ultrasound image segmentation using U-Net and test time augmentation. Amiri M; Brooks R; Behboodi B; Rivaz H; 32350786
IMAGING
10 BOLD signal physiology: Models and applications. Gauthier CJ, Fan AP 29544818
IMAGING
11 Exploring the alpha desynchronization hypothesis in resting state networks with intracranial electroencephalography and wiring cost estimates. Gómez-Ramírez J, Freedman S, Mateos D, Pérez Velázquez JL, Valiante TA 29142213
IMAGING
12 Dance and music share gray matter structural correlates. Karpati FJ, Giacosa C, Foster NEV, Penhune VB, Hyde KL 27923638
IMAGING
13 Cyberinfrastructure for Open Science at the Montreal Neurological Institute. Das S, Glatard T, Rogers C, Saigle J, Paiva S, MacIntyre L, Safi-Harab M, Rousseau ME, Stirling J, Khalili-Mahani N, MacFarlane D, Kostopoulos P, Rioux P, Madjar C, Lecours-Boucher X, Vanamala S, Adalat R, Mohaddes Z, Fonov VS, Milot S, Leppert I, Degroot C, Durcan TM, Campbell T, Moreau J, Dagher A, Collins DL, Karamchandani J, Bar-Or A, Fon EA, Hoge R, Baillet S, Rouleau G, Evans AC 28111547
IMAGING
14 Best practices in data analysis and sharing in neuroimaging using MRI. Nichols TE, Das S, Eickhoff SB, Evans AC, Glatard T, Hanke M, Kriegeskorte N, Milham MP, Poldrack RA, Poline JB, Proal E, Thirion B, Van Essen DC, White T, Yeo BT 28230846
IMAGING
15 Neuroimaging tests for clinical psychiatry: Are we there yet? Leyton M, Kennedy SH 28639935
IMAGING
16 Experimental Investigation of Left Ventricular Flow Patterns After Percutaneous Edge-to-Edge Mitral Valve Repair. Jeyhani M, Shahriari S, Labrosse M 29168199
IMAGING
17 The first MICCAI challenge on PET tumor segmentation. Hatt M, Laurent B, Ouahabi A, Fayad H, Tan S, Li L, Lu W, Jaouen V, Tauber C, Czakon J, Drapejkowski F, Dyrka W, Camarasu-Pop S, Cervenansky F, Girard P, Glatard T, Kain M, Yao Y, Barillot C, Kirov A, Visvikis D 29268169
IMAGING
18 Cluster based statistical feature extraction method for automatic bleeding detection in wireless capsule endoscopy video. Ghosh T, Fattah SA, Wahid KA, Zhu WP, Ahmad MO 29407997
IMAGING
19 Muscle Mass and Mortality After Cardiac Transplantation. Bibas L, Saleh E, Al-Kharji S, Chetrit J, Mullie L, Cantarovich M, Cecere R, Giannetti N, Afilalo J 29877924
IMAGING
20 Efficacy of Auditory versus Motor Learning for Skilled and Novice Performers. Brown RM, Penhune VB 30156505
IMAGING

 

Title:The first MICCAI challenge on PET tumor segmentation.
Authors:Hatt MLaurent BOuahabi AFayad HTan SLi LLu WJaouen VTauber CCzakon JDrapejkowski FDyrka WCamarasu-Pop SCervenansky FGirard PGlatard TKain MYao YBarillot CKirov AVisvikis D
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29268169?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1016/j.media.2017.12.007
Publication:Medical image analysis
Keywords:Comparative studyImage segmentationMICCAI challengePET functional volumes
PMID:29268169 Category:Med Image Anal Date Added:2019-06-20
Dept Affiliation: IMAGING
1 LaTIM, UMR 1101, INSERM, IBSAM, UBO, UBL, Brest, France. Electronic address: hatt@univ-brest.fr.
2 LaTIM, UMR 1101, INSERM, IBSAM, UBO, UBL, Brest, France.
3 Key Laboratory of Image Processing and Intelligent Control of Ministry of Education of China, School of Automation, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China.
4 Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New-York, USA.
5 INSERM, UMR 930, Imaging and brain, University of Tours, France.
6 Stermedia Sp. z o. o., ul. A. Ostrowskiego 13, Wroclaw, Poland.
7 Stermedia Sp. z o. o., ul. A. Ostrowskiego 13, Wroclaw, Poland; Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Fundamental Problems of Technology, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Poland.
8 Université de Lyon, CREATIS, CNRS UMR5220, INSERM UMR 1044, INSA-Lyon, Université Lyon 1, Lyon, France.
9 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
10 INRIA, Visages project-team, CNRS, IRISA 6074, INSERM, Visages, UMR 1228, University of Rennes I, Rennes Cx 35042, France.

Description:

The first MICCAI challenge on PET tumor segmentation.

Med Image Anal. 2018 02;44:177-195

Authors: Hatt M, Laurent B, Ouahabi A, Fayad H, Tan S, Li L, Lu W, Jaouen V, Tauber C, Czakon J, Drapejkowski F, Dyrka W, Camarasu-Pop S, Cervenansky F, Girard P, Glatard T, Kain M, Yao Y, Barillot C, Kirov A, Visvikis D

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Automatic functional volume segmentation in PET images is a challenge that has been addressed using a large array of methods. A major limitation for the field has been the lack of a benchmark dataset that would allow direct comparison of the results in the various publications. In the present work, we describe a comparison of recent methods on a large dataset following recommendations by the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) task group (TG) 211, which was carried out within a MICCAI (Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention) challenge.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Organization and funding was provided by France Life Imaging (FLI). A dataset of 176 images combining simulated, phantom and clinical images was assembled. A website allowed the participants to register and download training data (n?=?19). Challengers then submitted encapsulated pipelines on an online platform that autonomously ran the algorithms on the testing data (n?=?157) and evaluated the results. The methods were ranked according to the arithmetic mean of sensitivity and positive predictive value.

RESULTS: Sixteen teams registered but only four provided manuscripts and pipeline(s) for a total of 10 methods. In addition, results using two thresholds and the Fuzzy Locally Adaptive Bayesian (FLAB) were generated. All competing methods except one performed with median accuracy above 0.8. The method with the highest score was the convolutional neural network-based segmentation, which significantly outperformed 9 out of 12 of the other methods, but not the improved K-Means, Gaussian Model Mixture and Fuzzy C-Means methods.

CONCLUSION: The most rigorous comparative study of PET segmentation algorithms to date was carried out using a dataset that is the largest used in such studies so far. The hierarchy amongst the methods in terms of accuracy did not depend strongly on the subset of datasets or the metrics (or combination of metrics). All the methods submitted by the challengers except one demonstrated good performance with median accuracy scores above 0.8.

PMID: 29268169 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]





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