Replicability, Repeatability, and Long-term Reproducibility of Cerebellar Morphometry
Adult
Male
0301 basic medicine
Parcellation
FreeSurfer
Parcellation ; Algorithms [MeSH] ; Female [MeSH] ; Stochastic Processes [MeSH] ; FreeSurfer ; Aged [MeSH] ; Adult [MeSH] ; Humans [MeSH] ; Software [MeSH] ; Reproducibility ; Longitudinal Studies [MeSH] ; Segmentation ; Middle Aged [MeSH] ; Original Article ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging [MeSH] ; Male [MeSH] ; Reproducibility of Results [MeSH] ; Cerebellum/diagnostic imaging [MeSH] ; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted [MeSH] ; Cerebellum ; Cerebellum/anatomy ; CERES
CERES
03 medical and health sciences
Segmentation
0302 clinical medicine
Cerebellum
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Aged
Stochastic Processes
Reproducibility of Results
Middle Aged
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Reproducibility
Original Article
Female
Algorithms
Software
DOI:
10.1007/s12311-020-01227-2
Publication Date:
2021-01-09T14:15:40Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
AbstractTo identify robust and reproducible methods of cerebellar morphometry that can be used in future large-scale structural MRI studies, we investigated the replicability, repeatability, and long-term reproducibility of three fully automated software tools: FreeSurfer, CEREbellum Segmentation (CERES), and automatic cerebellum anatomical parcellation using U-Net with locally constrained optimization (ACAPULCO). Replicability was defined as computational replicability, determined by comparing two analyses of the same high-resolution MRI data set performed with identical analysis software and computer hardware. Repeatability was determined by comparing the analyses of two MRI scans of the same participant taken during two independent MRI sessions on the same day for the Kirby-21 study. Long-term reproducibility was assessed by analyzing two MRI scans of the same participant in the longitudinal OASIS-2 study. We determined percent difference, the image intraclass correlation coefficient, the coefficient of variation, and the intraclass correlation coefficient between two analyses. Our results show that CERES and ACAPULCO use stochastic algorithms that result in surprisingly high differences between identical analyses for ACAPULCO and small differences for CERES. Changes between two consecutive scans from the Kirby-21 study were less than ± 5% in most cases for FreeSurfer and CERES (i.e., demonstrating high repeatability). As expected, long-term reproducibility was lower than repeatability for all software tools. In summary, CERES is an accurate, as demonstrated before, and reproducible tool for fully automated segmentation and parcellation of the cerebellum. We conclude with recommendations for the assessment of replicability, repeatability, and long-term reproducibility in future studies on cerebellar structure.
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