KEYWORDS: Education and training, 3D modeling, Magnetic resonance imaging, Acoustics, Tongue, Motion detection, Data modeling, Motion models, Performance modeling, Diseases and disorders
Understanding the relationship between tongue motion patterns during speech and their resulting speech acoustic outcomes—i.e., articulatory-acoustic relation—is of great importance in assessing speech quality and developing innovative treatment and rehabilitative strategies. This is especially important when evaluating and detecting abnormal articulatory features in patients with speech-related disorders. In this work, we aim to develop a framework for detecting speech motion anomalies in conjunction with their corresponding speech acoustics. This is achieved through the use of a deep cross-modal translator trained on data from healthy individuals only, which bridges the gap between 4D motion fields obtained from tagged MRI and 2D spectrograms derived from speech acoustic data. The trained translator is used as an anomaly detector, by measuring the spectrogram reconstruction quality on healthy individuals or patients. In particular, the cross-modal translator is likely to yield limited generalization capabilities on patient data, which includes unseen out-of-distribution patterns and demonstrates subpar performance, when compared with healthy individuals. A one-class SVM is then used to distinguish the spectrograms of healthy individuals from those of patients. To validate our framework, we collected a total of 39 paired tagged MRI and speech waveforms, consisting of data from 36 healthy individuals and 3 tongue cancer patients. We used both 3D convolutional and transformer-based deep translation models, training them on the healthy training set and then applying them to both the healthy and patient testing sets. Our framework demonstrates a capability to detect abnormal patient data, thereby illustrating its potential in enhancing the understanding of the articulatory-acoustic relation for both healthy individuals and patients.
KEYWORDS: Data modeling, Magnetic resonance imaging, Education and training, Resection, Visual process modeling, Tumors, Modeling, 3D mask effects, Medical imaging, Machine learning
In this work, we aim to predict the survival time (ST) of glioblastoma (GBM) patients undergoing different treatments based on preoperative magnetic resonance (MR) scans. The personalized and precise treatment planning can be achieved by comparing the ST of different treatments. It is well established that both the current status of the patient (as represented by the MR scans) and the choice of treatment are the cause of ST. While previous related MR-based glioblastoma ST studies have focused only on the direct mapping of MR scans to ST, they have not included the underlying causal relationship between treatments and ST. To address this limitation, we propose a treatment-conditioned regression model for glioblastoma ST that incorporates treatment information in addition to MR scans. Our approach allows us to effectively utilize the data from all of the treatments in a unified manner, rather than having to train separate models for each of the treatments. Furthermore, treatment can be effectively injected into each convolutional layer through the adaptive instance normalization we employ. We evaluate our framework on the BraTS20 ST prediction task. Three treatment options are considered: Gross Total Resection (GTR), Subtotal Resection (STR), and no resection. The evaluation results demonstrate the effectiveness of injecting the treatment for estimating GBM survival.
Investigating the relationship between internal tissue point motion of the tongue and oropharyngeal muscle deformation measured from tagged MRI and intelligible speech can aid in advancing speech motor control theories and developing novel treatment methods for speech related-disorders. However, elucidating the relationship between these two sources of information is challenging, due in part to the disparity in data structure between spatiotemporal motion fields (i.e., 4D motion fields) and one-dimensional audio waveforms. In this work, we present an efficient encoder-decoder translation network for exploring the predictive information inherent in 4D motion fields via 2D spectrograms as a surrogate of the audio data. Specifically, our encoder is based on 3D convolutional spatial modeling and transformer-based temporal modeling. The extracted features are processed by an asymmetric 2D convolution decoder to generate spectrograms that correspond to 4D motion fields. Furthermore, we incorporate a generative adversarial training approach into our framework to further improve synthesis quality on our generated spectrograms. We experiment on 63 paired motion field sequences and speech waveforms, demonstrating that our framework enables the generation of clear audio waveforms from a sequence of motion fields. Thus, our framework has the potential to improve our understanding of the relationship between these two modalities and inform the development of treatments for speech disorders.
Lesions or organ boundaries visible through medical imaging data are often ambiguous, thus resulting in significant variations in multi-reader delineations, i.e., the source of aleatoric uncertainty. In particular, quantifying the inter-observer variability of manual annotations with Magnetic Resonance (MR) Imaging data plays a crucial role in establishing a reference standard for various diagnosis and treatment tasks. Most segmentation methods, however, simply model a mapping from an image to its single segmentation map and do not take the disagreement of annotators into consideration. In order to account for inter-observer variability, without sacrificing accuracy, we propose a novel variational inference framework to model the distribution of plausible segmentation maps, given a specific MR image, which explicitly represents the multi-reader variability. Specifically, we resort to a latent vector to encode the multi-reader variability and counteract the inherent information loss in the imaging data. Then, we apply a variational autoencoder network and optimize its evidence lower bound (ELBO) to efficiently approximate the distribution of the segmentation map, given an MR image. Experimental results, carried out with the QUBIQ brain growth MRI segmentation datasets with seven annotators, demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.
Cycle reconstruction regularized adversarial training—e.g., CycleGAN, DiscoGAN, and DualGAN—has been widely used for image style transfer with unpaired training data. Several recent works, however, have shown that local distortions are frequent, and structural consistency cannot be guaranteed. Targeting this issue, prior works usually relied on additional segmentation or consistent feature extraction steps that are task-specific. To counter this, this work aims to learn a general add-on structural feature extractor, by explicitly enforcing the structural alignment between an input and its synthesized image. Specifically, we propose a novel input-output image patches self-training scheme to achieve a disentanglement of underlying anatomical structures and imaging modalities. The translator and structure encoder are updated, following an alternating training protocol. In addition, the information w.r.t. imaging modality can be eliminated with an asymmetric adversarial game. We train, validate, and test our network on 1,768, 416, and 1,560 unpaired subject-independent slices of tagged and cine magnetic resonance imaging from a total of twenty healthy subjects, respectively, demonstrating superior performance over competing methods.
Unsupervised domain adaptation (UDA) has been widely used to transfer knowledge from a labeled source domain to an unlabeled target domain to counter the difficulty of labeling in a new domain. The training of conventional solutions usually relies on the existence of both source and target domain data. However, privacy of the large-scale and well-labeled data in the source domain and trained model parameters can become the major concern of cross center/domain collaborations. In this work, to address this, we propose a practical solution to UDA for segmentation with a black-box segmentation model trained in the source domain only, rather than original source data or a white-box source model. Specifically, we resort to a knowledge distillation scheme with exponential mixup decay (EMD) to gradually learn target-specific representations. In addition, unsupervised entropy minimization is further applied to regularization of the target domain confidence. We evaluated our framework on the BraTS 2018 database, achieving performance on par with white-box source model adaptation approaches.
Accurate measurement of strain in a deforming organ has been an important step in motion analysis using medical images. In recent years, internal tissue’s in vivo motion and strain computation is mostly achieved through dynamic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. However, such data lack information on tissue’s intrinsic fiber directions, preventing computed strain tensors from being projected onto a direction of interest. Although diffusion-weighted MR imaging excels at providing fiber tractography, it yields static images unmatched with dynamic MR data. In this work, we report an algorithm workflow that estimates strain values in the diffusion MR space by matching corresponding tagged dynamic MR images. We focus on processing a dataset of various human tongue deformations in speech. The geometry of tongue muscle fibers is provided by diffusion tractography, while spatiotemporal motion fields are provided by tagged MR analysis. The tongue’s deforming shapes are determined by segmenting a synthetic cine dynamic MR sequence generated from tagged data using a deep neural network. Estimated motion fields are transformed into the diffusion MR space using diffeomorphic registration, eventually leading to strain values computed in the direction of muscle fibers. The method was tested on 78 time volumes acquired during three sets of specific tongue deformations including both speech and protrusion motion. Strain in the line of action of seven internal tongue muscles was extracted and compared both intra- and inter-subject. Resulting compression and stretching patterns of individual muscles revealed unique behavior of individual muscles and their potential activation pattern.
To advance our understanding of speech motor control, it is essential to image and assess dynamic functional patterns of internal structures caused by the complex muscle anatomy inside the human tongue. Speech pathologists are investigating into new tools that help assessment of internal tongue muscle’s cooperative mechanics on top of their anatomical differences. Previous studies using dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the tongue revealed that tongue muscles tend to function in different groups during speech, especially the floor-of-the-mouth (FOM) muscles. In this work, we developed a method that analyzed the unique functional pattern of the FOM muscles in speech. First, four-dimensional motion fields of the whole tongue were computed using tagged MRI. Meanwhile, a statistical atlas of the tongue was constructed to form a common space for subject comparison, while a manually delineated mask of internal tongue muscles was used to separate individual muscle’s motion. Then we computed four-dimensional motion correlation between each muscle and the FOM muscle group. Finally, dynamic correlation of different muscle groups was compared and evaluated. We used data from a study group of nineteen subjects including both healthy controls and oral cancer patients. Results revealed that most internal tongue muscles coordinated in a similar pattern in speech while the FOM muscles followed a unique pattern that helped supporting the tongue body and pivoting its rotation. The proposed method can help provide further interpretation of clinical observations and speech motor control from an imaging point of view.
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