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Practical methods for segmentation and calculation of brain volume and intracranial volume: a guide and comparison
Author(s) -
Thomas Harkey,
David L. Baker,
John C. Hagen,
H. William Scott,
Viktoras Palys
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
quantitative imaging in medicine and surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.766
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 2223-4292
pISSN - 2223-4306
DOI - 10.21037/qims-21-958
Subject(s) - segmentation , neuroimaging , volume (thermodynamics) , computer science , brain size , medical physics , software , data science , artificial intelligence , medicine , radiology , magnetic resonance imaging , psychiatry , physics , quantum mechanics , programming language
Accurate segmentation and calculation of total brain volume (BV) and intracranial volume (ICV) (further-volumetry) may serve various clinical tasks and research studies in neuroscience. Manual segmentation is extremely time consuming. There is a relative lack of published broad recommendations and comparisons of tools for automated volumetry, especially for users without expertise in computer science, for settings with limited resources, and when neuroimaging quality is suboptimal due to clinical circumstances. Our objective is to decrease the barrier to entry for research and clinical groups to perform volumetric cranial imaging analysis using free and reliable software tools.

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