Thalamic nuclei segmentation from T$_1$-weighted MRI: unifying and benchmarking state-of-the-art methods with young and old cohorts
Brendan Williams, Dan Nguyen, Julie Vidal, Alzheimer's Disease, Neuroimaging Initiative, Manojkumar Saranathan

TL;DR
This study benchmarks four state-of-the-art thalamic nuclei segmentation methods on T1 MRI across different cohorts, identifying the most accurate approach for studying thalamic structure and degeneration in health and disease.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of segmentation methods under a unified framework and offers practical recommendations for future neuroimaging studies.
Findings
HIPS-THOMAS achieved the most accurate segmentation of thalamic nuclei.
HIPS-THOMAS best distinguished between healthy controls and disease states.
The study establishes a standardized benchmarking framework for thalamic segmentation methods.
Abstract
The thalamus and its constituent nuclei are critical for a broad range of cognitive and sensorimotor processes, and implicated in many neurological and neurodegenerative conditions. However, the functional involvement and specificity of thalamic nuclei in human neuroimaging is underappreciated and not well studied due, in part, to technical challenges of accurately identifying and segmenting nuclei. This challenge is further exacerbated by a lack of common nomenclature for comparing segmentation methods. Here, we use data from healthy young (Human Connectome Project, 100 subjects) and older healthy adults, plus those with minor cognitive impairment and Alzheimers disease (Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, 540 subjects), to benchmark four state of the art thalamic segmentation methods for T1 MRI (FreeSurfer, HIPS-THOMAS, SCS-CNN, and T1-THOMAS) under a single segmentation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments
