Loading…

Automated quality control of small animal MR neuroimaging data

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a valuable tool for studying brain structure and function in animal and clinical studies. With the growth of public MRI repositories, access to data has finally become easier. However, filtering large datasets for potential poor-quality outliers can be a challenge...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Imaging neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2024-10, Vol.2, p.1-23
Main Authors: Kalantari, Aref, Shahbazi, Mehrab, Schneider, Marc, Raikes, Adam C., Frazão, Victor Vera, Bhattrai, Avnish, Carnevale, Lorenzo, Diao, Yujian, Franx, Bart A. A., Gammaraccio, Francesco, Goncalves, Lisa-Marie, Lee, Susan, van Leeuwen, Esther M., Michalek, Annika, Mueller, Susanne, Olvera, Alejandro Rivera, Padro, Daniel, Selim, Mohamed Kotb, van der Toorn, Annette, Varriano, Federico, Vrooman, Roël, Wenk, Patricia, Albers, H. Elliott, Boehm-Sturm, Philipp, Budinger, Eike, Canals, Santiago, De Santis, Silvia, Brinton, Roberta Diaz, Dijkhuizen, Rick M., Eixarch, Elisenda, Forloni, Gianluigi, Grandjean, Joanes, Hekmatyar, Khan, Jacobs, Russell E., Jelescu, Ileana, Kurniawan, Nyoman D., Lembo, Giuseppe, Longo, Dario Livio, Maria, Naomi S. Sta, Micotti, Edoardo, Muñoz-Moreno, Emma, Ramos-Cabrer, Pedro, Reichardt, Wilfried, Soria, Guadalupe, Ielacqua, Giovanna D., Aswendt, Markus
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a valuable tool for studying brain structure and function in animal and clinical studies. With the growth of public MRI repositories, access to data has finally become easier. However, filtering large datasets for potential poor-quality outliers can be a challenge. We present AIDAqc, a machine-learning-assisted automated Python-based command-line tool for small animal MRI quality assessment. Quality control features include signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), temporal SNR, and motion. All features are automatically calculated and no regions of interest are needed. Automated outlier detection for a given dataset combines the interquartile range and the machine-learning methods one-class support vector machine, isolation forest, local outlier factor, and elliptic envelope. To evaluate the reliability of individual quality control metrics, a simulation of noise (Gaussian, salt and pepper, speckle) and motion was performed. In outlier detection, single scans with induced artifacts were successfully identified by AIDAqc. AIDAqc was challenged in a large heterogeneous dataset collected from 19 international laboratories, including data from mice, rats, rabbits, hamsters, and gerbils, obtained with different hardware and at different field strengths. The results show that the manual inter-rater agreement (mean Fleiss Kappa score 0.17) is low when identifying poor-quality data. A direct comparison of AIDAqc results, therefore, showed only low-to-moderate concordance. In a manual post hoc validation of AIDAqc output, precision was high (>70%). The outlier data can have a significant impact on further postprocessing, as shown in representative functional and structural connectivity analysis. In summary, this pipeline optimized for small animal MRI provides researchers with a valuable tool to efficiently and effectively assess the quality of their MRI data, which is essential for improved reliability and reproducibility.
ISSN:2837-6056
2837-6056
DOI:10.1162/imag_a_00317