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Diffeomorphometry is the metric study of imagery, shape and form in the discipline of Computational anatomy (CA) in medical imaging. The study of images in computational anatomy rely on high-dimensional diffeomorphism groups which generate orbits of the form , in which images can be dense scalar magnetic resonce or computed axial tomography images. For deformable shapes these are the collection of manifolds , points, curves and surfaces. In CA, these orbits are in general considered smooth Riemannian manifolds since at every point of the manifold there is an inner product inducing the norm on the tangent space that varies smoothly from point to point in the manifolds. This is generated by viewing the group of diffeomorphisms as a Riemannian manifold with , associated to the tangent space at . This induces the norm and metric on the orbits of images and or shape manifolds under the action from the group of diffeomorphisms. The metric is constructed as the shortest length flow of diffeomorphisms connecting one image or shape to another.

The study of metrics on groups of diffeomorphisms and the study of metrics between manifolds and surfaces has been an area of significant investigation.[1][2][3][4][5][6] In Computational anatomy, the diffeomorphometry metric measures how close and far two shapes or images are from each other. Informally, the metric length is the shortest length or geodesic flow which carries one coordinate system into the other.

Oftentimes, the familiar Euclidean metric is not directly applicable because the patterns of shapes and images don't form a vector space. In the Riemannian orbit model of Computational anatomy, diffeomorphisms acting on the forms don't act linearly. There are many ways to define metrics, and for the sets associated to shapes the Hausdorff metric is another. The method we use to induce the Riemannian metric is used to induce the metric on the orbit of shapes by defining it in terms of the metric length between diffeomorphic coordinate system transformations of the flows. Measuring the lengths of the geodesic flow between coordinates systems in the orbit of shapes is called diffeomorphometry.

The diffeomorphisms group generated as Lagrangian and Eulerian flows

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The diffeomorphisms in computational anatomy are generated to satisfy the Lagrangian and Eulerian specification of the flow fields, , generated via the ordinary differential equation

(Lagrangian flow)

with the Eulerian vector fields in for , with the inverse for the flow given by

(Eulerianflow)

and the Jacobian matrix for flows in given as

To ensure smooth flows of diffeomorphisms with inverse, the vector fields must be at least 1-time continuously differentiable in space[7][8] which are modelled as elements of the Hilbert space using the Sobolev embedding theorems so that each element has 3-square-integrable derivatives thusly implies embeds smoothly in 1-time continuously differentiable functions.[7][8] The diffeomorphism group are flows with vector fields absolutely integrable in Sobolev norm:

(Diffeomorphism Group)

The Riemannian orbit model

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Shapes in Computational Anatomy (CA) are studied via the use of diffeomorphic mapping for establishing correspondences between anatomical coordinate systems. In this setting, 3-dimensional medical images are modelled as diffemorphic transformations of some exemplar, termed the template , resulting in the observed images to be elements of the random orbit model of CA. For images these are defined as , with for charts representing sub-manifolds denoted as .

The Riemannian metric

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The orbit of shapes and forms in Computational Anatomy are generated by the group action , . These are made into a Riemannian orbits by introducing a metric associated to each point and associated tangent space. For this a metric is defined on the group which induces the metric on the orbit. Take as the metric for Computational anatomy at each element of the tangent space in the group of diffeomorphisms

,

with the vector fields modelled to be in a Hilbert space with the norm in the Hilbert space . We model as a reproducing kernel Hilbert space (RKHS) defined by a 1-1, differential operator , where is the dual-space. In general, is a generalized function or distribution, the linear form associated to the inner-product and norm for generalized functions are interpreted by integration by parts according to for ,

When , a vector density, .

The differential operator is selected so that the Green's kernel associated to the inverse is sufficiently smooth so that the vector fields support 1-continuous derivative. The Sobolev embedding theorem arguments were made in demonstrating that 1-continuous derivative is required for smooth flows. The Green's operator generated from the Green's function(scalar case) associated to the differential operator smooths. For proper choice of then is an RKHS with the operator . The Green's kernels associated to the differential operator smooths since since for controlling enough derivatives in the square-integral sense the kernel is continuously differentiable in both variables implying

Diffeomorphometry: The metric space of shapes and forms

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The right-invariant metric on diffeomorphisms

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The metric on the group of diffeomorphisms is defined by the distance as defined on pairs of elements in the group of diffeomorphisms according to

: (metric-diffeomorphisms)

This distance provides a right-invariant metric of diffeomorphometry,[9][10][11] invariant to reparameterization of space since for all ,


The metric on shapes and forms

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The distance on images[12] , ,

(metric-shapes-forms)

The distance on shapes and forms,[13] ,

(metric-shapes-forms)

The metric on geodesic flows of landmarks, surfaces, and volumes within the orbit

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For calculating the metric, the geodesics are a dynamical system, the flow of coordinates and the control the vector field related via The Hamiltonian view [14] [15] [16] [17][18] reparameterizes the momentum distribution in terms of the Hamiltonian momentum, a Lagrange multiplier constraining the Lagrangian velocity .accordingly:

The Pontryagin maximum principle[14] gives the Hamiltonian The optimizing vector field with dynamics . Along the geodesic the Hamiltonian is constant[19]: . The metric distance between coordinate systems connected via the geodesic determined by the induced distance between identity and group element:

Landmark or pointset geodesics

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Illustration of geodesic flow for one landmark, demonstrating diffeomorphic motion of background space. Red arrow shows p 0, blue curve shows \varphi t(x 1), black grid shows \varphi t
Illustration of geodesic flow for one landmark, demonstrating diffeomorphic motion of background space. Red arrow shows , blue curve shows , black grid shows

For Landmarks, , the Hamiltonian momentum with Hamiltonian dynamics taking the form with

The metric between landmarks

The dynamics associated to these geodesics is shown in the accompanying figure.

Surface geodesics

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For surfaces, the Hamiltonian momentum is defined across the surface has Hamiltonian and dnamics

The metric between surface coordinates

Volume geodesics

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For volumes the Hamiltonian with dynamics

The metric between volumes

References

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  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference :8 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Younes, L. (1998-04-01). "Computable Elastic Distances Between Shapes". SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics. 58 (2): 565–586. doi:10.1137/S0036139995287685.
  3. ^ Mio, Washington; Srivastava, Anuj; Joshi, Shantanu (2006-09-25). "On Shape of Plane Elastic Curves". International Journal of Computer Vision. 73 (3): 307–324. doi:10.1007/s11263-006-9968-0.
  4. ^ Michor, Peter W.; Mumford, David; Shah, Jayant; Younes, Laurent (2007-06-28). "A Metric on Shape Space with Explicit Geodesics". arXiv:0706.4299.
  5. ^ Michor, Peter W.; Mumford, David. "An overview of the Riemannian metrics on spaces of curves using the Hamiltonian approach". Applied and Computational Harmonic Analysis. 23 (1): 74–113. arXiv:math/0605009. doi:10.1016/j.acha.2006.07.004.
  6. ^ Kurtek, Sebastian; Klassen, Eric; Gore, John C.; Ding, Zhaohua; Srivastava, Anuj (2012-09-01). "Elastic geodesic paths in shape space of parameterized surfaces". IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence. 34 (9): 1717–1730. doi:10.1109/TPAMI.2011.233. PMID 22144521.
  7. ^ a b P. Dupuis, U. Grenander, M.I. Miller, Existence of Solutions on Flows of Diffeomorphisms, Quarterly of Applied Math, 1997.
  8. ^ a b A. Trouvé. Action de groupe de dimension infinie et reconnaissance de formes. C R Acad Sci Paris Sér I Math, 321(8):1031– 1034, 1995.
  9. ^ Miller, M. I.; Younes, L. (2001-01-01). "Group Actions, Homeomorphisms, And Matching: A General Framework". International Journal of Computer Vision. 41: 61–84.
  10. ^ Cite error: The named reference pmid24904924 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  11. ^ Miller, Michael I.; Trouvé, Alain; Younes, Laurent (2015-01-01). "Hamiltonian Systems and Optimal Control in Computational Anatomy: 100 Years Since D'Arcy Thompson". Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering. 17 (1): 447–509. doi:10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071114-040601. PMID 26643025.
  12. ^ Miller, M. I.; Younes, L. (2001-01-01). "Group Actions, Homeomorphisms, And Matching: A General Framework". International Journal of Computer Vision. 41: 61–84.
  13. ^ Miller, Michael I.; Younes, Laurent; Trouvé, Alain (March 2014). "Diffeomorphometry and geodesic positioning systems for human anatomy". Technology. 2 (1): 36. doi:10.1142/S2339547814500010. ISSN 2339-5478. PMC 4041578. PMID 24904924.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: PMC format (link)
  14. ^ a b Miller, Michael I.; Trouvé, Alain; Younes, Laurent (2015-01-01). "Hamiltonian Systems and Optimal Control in Computational Anatomy: 100 Years Since D'arcy Thompson". Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering. 17 (1): null. doi:10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071114-040601. PMID 26643025.
  15. ^ Glaunès J, Trouvé A, Younes L. 2006. Modeling planar shape variation via Hamiltonian flows of curves. In Statistics and Analysis of Shapes, ed. H Krim, A Yezzi Jr, pp. 335–61. Model. Simul. Sci. Eng. Technol. Boston: Birkhauser
  16. ^ Arguillère S, Trélat E, Trouvé A, Younes L. 2014. Shape deformation analysis from the optimal control viewpoint. arXiv:1401.0661 [math.OC]
  17. ^ Michael I. Miller, Laurent Younes, and Alain Trouvé, Diffeomorphometry and geodesic positioning systems for human anatomy, Technology 02, 36 (2014). doi:10.1142/S2339547814500010
  18. ^ Michor, Peter W.; Mumford, David (2007-07-01). "An overview of the Riemannian metrics on spaces of curves using the Hamiltonian approach". Applied and Computational Harmonic Analysis. Special Issue on Mathematical Imaging. 23 (1): 74–113. doi:10.1016/j.acha.2006.07.004.
  19. ^ Miller, Michael I.; Trouvé, Alain; Younes, Laurent (2015-01-01). "Hamiltonian Systems and Optimal Control in Computational Anatomy: 100 Years Since D'Arcy Thompson". Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering. 17 (1): 447–509. doi:10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071114-040601. PMID 26643025.