 |
| Volume 8, Number 9, Article 15, Pages 1-16 |
doi:10.1167/8.9.15 |
http://journalofvision.org/8/9/15/ |
ISSN 1534-7362 |
ConTrack: Finding the most likely pathways between brain regions using diffusion tractography
Anthony J. Sherbondy |
Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, USA |
|
Robert F. Dougherty |
Department of Psychology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, USA |
|
Michal Ben-Shachar |
Department of Psychology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, USA |
|
Sandy Napel |
Department of Radiology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, USA |
|
Brian A. Wandell |
Department of Psychology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, USA |
|
Abstract
Magnetic resonance diffusion-weighted imaging coupled with fiber tractography (DFT) is the only non-invasive method for measuring white matter pathways in the living human brain. DFT is often used to discover new pathways. But there are also many applications, particularly in visual neuroscience, in which we are confident that two brain regions are connected, and we wish to find the most likely pathway forming the connection. In several cases, current DFT algorithms fail to find these candidate pathways. To overcome this limitation, we have developed a probabilistic DFT algorithm (ConTrack) that identifies the most likely pathways between two regions. We introduce the algorithm in three parts: a sampler to generate a large set of potential pathways, a scoring algorithm that measures the likelihood of a pathway, and an inferential step to identify the most likely pathways connecting two regions. In a series of experiments using human data, we show that ConTrack estimates known pathways at positions that are consistent with those found using a high quality deterministic algorithm. Further we show that separating sampling and scoring enables ConTrack to identify valid pathways, known to exist, that are missed by other deterministic and probabilistic DFT algorithms.
|
|