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On the generalizability of diffusion MRI signal representations across acquisition parameters, sequences and tissue types: Chronicles of the MEMENTO challenge.

NeuroImage | 2021

Diffusion MRI (dMRI) has become an invaluable tool to assess the microstructural organization of brain tissue. Depending on the specific acquisition settings, the dMRI signal encodes specific properties of the underlying diffusion process. In the last two decades, several signal representations have been proposed to fit the dMRI signal and decode such properties. Most methods, however, are tested and developed on a limited amount of data, and their applicability to other acquisition schemes remains unknown. With this work, we aimed to shed light on the generalizability of existing dMRI signal representations to different diffusion encoding parameters and brain tissue types. To this end, we organized a community challenge - named MEMENTO, making available the same datasets for fair comparisons across algorithms and techniques. We considered two state-of-the-art diffusion datasets, including single-diffusion-encoding (SDE) spin-echo data from a human brain with over 3820 unique diffusion weightings (the MASSIVE dataset), and double (oscillating) diffusion encoding data (DDE/DODE) of a mouse brain including over 2520 unique data points. A subset of the data sampled in 5 different voxels was openly distributed, and the challenge participants were asked to predict the remaining part of the data. After one year, eight participant teams submitted a total of 80 signal fits. For each submission, we evaluated the mean squared error, the variance of the prediction error and the Bayesian information criteria. The received submissions predicted either multi-shell SDE data (37%) or DODE data (22%), followed by cartesian SDE data (19%) and DDE (18%). Most submissions predicted the signals measured with SDE remarkably well, with the exception of low and very strong diffusion weightings. The prediction of DDE and DODE data seemed more challenging, likely because none of the submissions explicitly accounted for diffusion time and frequency. Next to the choice of the model, decisions on fit procedure and hyperparameters play a major role in the prediction performance, highlighting the importance of optimizing and reporting such choices. This work is a community effort to highlight strength and limitations of the field at representing dMRI acquired with trending encoding schemes, gaining insights into how different models generalize to different tissue types and fiber configurations over a large range of diffusion encodings.

Pubmed ID: 34237442 RIS Download

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Associated grants

  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 104943/Z/14/Z
  • Agency: NIBIB NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 EB027585
  • Agency: Medical Research Council, United Kingdom
    Id: MR/T020296/1
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 104943
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 096646/Z/11/Z
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 096646

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ExploreDTI (tool)

RRID:SCR_001643

A graphical toolbox developed in Matlab for exploratory diffusion (tensor) MRI and fiber tractography. It includes diffusion reconstruction approaches, analysis and visualization tools for fiber tractography, atlas based segmentation, and connectivity networks. It also provides a wide range of quality assessment and pre-processing tools. Main features: * Visualization of scalar and vector maps of various diffusion tensor properties * Display of principal diffusion vectors, cuboids, and ellipsoids with several color-encodings * Deterministic (streamline) and 'probabilistic' (wild-bootstrap) fiber tractography * Clustering of fiber tracts * Data quality assessment tools * HARDI reconstructions (Q-ball and spherical deconvolution imaging) * Tract-specific measurements * Tract-segment analysis * Motion / distortion correction (with B-matrix rotation!) * Other cool stuff... (see publication link)

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