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Abstract #0240

NeoAudi Tract: An Automated Tool for Identifying Auditory Fiber Bundles in Infants

Feihong Liu1,2, Yaoxuan Wang3,4,5, Jinchen Gu2, Jiawei Huang2, Jiameng Liu2, Rui Hua6, Yuting Zhu3,4,5, Mengda Jiang7, Feng Shi6, Han Zhang2,8, Zhaoyan Wang3,4,5, Jun Feng1, Hao Wu3,4,5, and Dinggang Shen2,6,8
1School of Information and Technology, Northwest University, Xi'an, China, 2School of Biomedical Engineering & State Key Laboratory of Advanced Medical Materials and Devices, ShanghaiTech University, Shanghai, China, 3Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China, 4Ear Institute, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China, 5Shanghai Key Laboratory of Translational Medicine on Ear and Nose Diseases, Shanghai, China, 6Shanghai United Imaging Intelligence Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China, 7Department of Radiology, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China, 8Shanghai Clinical Research and Trial Center, Shanghai, China

Synopsis

Keywords: Data Processing, Pediatric, Neuroimage computing, Auditory pathway, Normal development

Motivation: Charting the development of infant auditory system is vital for understanding language acquisition and hearing disorders.

Goal(s): Extracting auditory fiber bundles from diffusion MRI data and overcoming the processing difficulties due to tiny and complex structures, as well as very low tissue contrast in the structural MRI data.

Approach: We propose an NAT framework with three core processes: 1) constructing a high-resolution atlas, 2) segmenting tissues and regions of interest (ROIs), and 3) applying a hierarchical registration framework.

Results: A high-resolution auditory fiber bundle template is constructed, and 12 auditory fiber bundles are successfully extracted.

Impact: Our approach is the first toolbox to identify individual auditory fiber bundles in infants, thus effectively mitigating the processing challenges caused by spatial-temporal asynchrony during the development of the first two postnatal years.

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Keywords