Tractostorm: Rater reproducibility assessment in tractography dissection of the pyramidal tract

Author:

Rheault FrancoisORCID,De Benedictis Alessandro,Daducci Alessandro,Maffei Chiara,Tax Chantal M.W,Romascano David,Caverzasi Eduardo,Morency Felix C.,Corrivetti Francesco,Pestilli Franco,Girard Gabriel,Theaud Guillaume,Zemmoura Ilyess,Hau Janice,Glavin Kelly,Jordan Kesshi M.,Pomiecko Kristofer,Chamberland MaximeORCID,Barakovic Muhamed,Goyette Nil,Poulin Philippe,Chenot Quentin,Panesar Sandip S.,Sarubbo Silvio,Petit Laurent,Descoteaux Maxime

Abstract

AbstractInvestigative studies of white matter (WM) brain structures using diffusion MRI (dMRI) tractography frequently require manual WM bundle segmentation, often called “virtual dissection”. Human errors and personal decisions make these manual segmentations hard to reproduce, which have not yet been quantified by the dMRI community. The contribution of this study is to provide the first large-scale, international, multi-center variability assessment of the “virtual dissection” of the pyramidal tract (PyT). Eleven (11) experts and thirteen (13) non-experts in neuroanatomy and “virtual dissection” were asked to perform 30 PyT segmentation and their results were compared using various voxel-wise and streamline-wise measures. Overall the voxel representation is always more reproducible than streamlines (≈70% and ≈35% overlap respectively) and distances between segmentations are also lower for voxel-wise than streamline-wise measures (¾3mm and ¾ûmm respectively). This needs to be seriously considered before using tract-based measures (e.g. bundle volume versus streamline count) for an analysis. We show and argue that future bundle segmentation protocols need to be designed to be more robust to human subjectivity. Coordinated efforts by the diffusion MRI tractography community are needed to quantify and account for reproducibility of WM bundle extraction techniques in this era of open and collaborative science.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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