Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone

The femur is the longest bone in the human body and serves the important purposes of load-bearing and allowing bipedal locomotion. Accurate modelling of the variation in shape within the healthy adult population can be useful for a variety of applications: from the mere anatomical description of its...

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Main Author: Tardugno, Angelo
Other Authors: Bull, Anthony
Published: Imperial College London 2010
Subjects:
612
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.519296
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5192962017-08-30T03:16:38ZNovel approaches to statistical shape modelling of boneTardugno, AngeloBull, Anthony2010The femur is the longest bone in the human body and serves the important purposes of load-bearing and allowing bipedal locomotion. Accurate modelling of the variation in shape within the healthy adult population can be useful for a variety of applications: from the mere anatomical description of its features, in order to better understand its function, to more complex tasks such as pathology detection or surgical planning. Statistical Shape Modelling (SSM) is a well-established technique that enables to capture the variability within a set of training shapes and describes it with a reduced set of variables. The aim of this thesis is to evaluate the performance of a SSM based on a point cloud representation of shape, and introduce and test subsequent improvements to the modelling process that can increase its clinical relevance and scope of application. The standard approach to SSM employs a dimension-reducing technique, generally by means of Principal Component Analysis (PCA). However, this approach favours the compactness of the model, thus not focusing on other aspects that may be more relevant to clinical practice. Although rotation of the principal components is commonly performed as a post-processing step in statistical analysis involving PCA, it is not routinely applied in SSM. By applying this class of rotation, the components' effects are more localised, allowing a better interpretation, understanding and classification of pathological deformities. Among other possible representations, the Medial Axis Transform (MAT) could offer a further insight into shape modelling, since it allows the information about thickness to be decoupled from the rest of the shape. SSMs based on this representation can lead to a di erent perspective on the understanding of femoral anatomy and function,and can also enable the reconstruction of the complete anatomy starting from a reduced set of features, with diverse applications in the elds of surgical planning, forensic science and paleontology.612Imperial College Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.519296http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/5881Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 612
spellingShingle 612
Tardugno, Angelo
Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
description The femur is the longest bone in the human body and serves the important purposes of load-bearing and allowing bipedal locomotion. Accurate modelling of the variation in shape within the healthy adult population can be useful for a variety of applications: from the mere anatomical description of its features, in order to better understand its function, to more complex tasks such as pathology detection or surgical planning. Statistical Shape Modelling (SSM) is a well-established technique that enables to capture the variability within a set of training shapes and describes it with a reduced set of variables. The aim of this thesis is to evaluate the performance of a SSM based on a point cloud representation of shape, and introduce and test subsequent improvements to the modelling process that can increase its clinical relevance and scope of application. The standard approach to SSM employs a dimension-reducing technique, generally by means of Principal Component Analysis (PCA). However, this approach favours the compactness of the model, thus not focusing on other aspects that may be more relevant to clinical practice. Although rotation of the principal components is commonly performed as a post-processing step in statistical analysis involving PCA, it is not routinely applied in SSM. By applying this class of rotation, the components' effects are more localised, allowing a better interpretation, understanding and classification of pathological deformities. Among other possible representations, the Medial Axis Transform (MAT) could offer a further insight into shape modelling, since it allows the information about thickness to be decoupled from the rest of the shape. SSMs based on this representation can lead to a di erent perspective on the understanding of femoral anatomy and function,and can also enable the reconstruction of the complete anatomy starting from a reduced set of features, with diverse applications in the elds of surgical planning, forensic science and paleontology.
author2 Bull, Anthony
author_facet Bull, Anthony
Tardugno, Angelo
author Tardugno, Angelo
author_sort Tardugno, Angelo
title Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
title_short Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
title_full Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
title_fullStr Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
title_full_unstemmed Novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
title_sort novel approaches to statistical shape modelling of bone
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2010
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.519296
work_keys_str_mv AT tardugnoangelo novelapproachestostatisticalshapemodellingofbone
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