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Rights statement: This is author's peer-reviewed manuscript as accepted for publication
Accepted author manuscript, 2.17 MB, PDF document
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 643-658 |
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Journal | NeuroImage: Clinical |
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Volume | 16 |
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Early online date | 8 Sep 2017 |
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DOIs | |
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Publication status | Published - 2017 |
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Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) can manifest in a number of ways. Many of these result in hyperintense regions visible on T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images. The automatic segmentation of these lesions has been the focus of many studies. However, previous methods tended to be limited to certain types of pathology, as a consequence of either restricting the search to the white matter, or by training on an individual pathology. Here we present an unsupervised abnormality detection method which is able to detect abnormally hyperintense regions on FLAIR regardless of the underlying pathology or location. The method uses a combination of image synthesis, Gaussian mixture models and one class support vector machines, and needs only be trained on healthy tissue. We evaluate our method by comparing segmentation results from 127 subjects with SVD with three established methods and report signifcantly superior performance across a number of metrics.
ID: 43181241