Dendritic Spine Shape Analysis: a Clustering Perspective
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Date
2016
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Functional properties of neurons are strongly coupled with their morphology. Changes in neuronal activity alter morphological characteristics of dendritic spines. First step towards understanding the structure-function relationship is to group spines into main spine classes reported in the literature. Shape analysis of dendritic spines can help neuroscientists understand the underlying relationships. Due to unavailability of reliable automated tools, this analysis is currently performed manually which is a time-intensive and subjective task. Several studies on spine shape classification have been reported in the literature, however, there is an on-going debate on whether distinct spine shape classes exist or whether spines should be modeled through a continuum of shape variations. Another challenge is the subjectivity and bias that is introduced due to the supervised nature of classification approaches. In this paper, we aim to address these issues by presenting a clustering perspective. In this context, clustering may serve both confirmation of known patterns and discovery of new ones. We perform cluster analysis on two-photon microscopic images of spines using morphological, shape, and appearance based features and gain insights into the spine shape analysis problem. We use histogram of oriented gradients (HOG), disjunctive normal shape models (DNSM), morphological features, and intensity profile based features for cluster analysis.We use x-means to perform cluster analysis that selects the number of clusters automatically using the Bayesian information criterion (BIC). For all features, this analysis produces 4 clusters and we observe the formation of at least one cluster consisting of spines which are difficult to be assigned to a known class. This observation supports the argument of intermediate shape types. © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016.
Description
Computer Vision - ECCV 2016 Workshops, Proceedings -- 8 October 2016 through 16 October 2016 -- 184029
Keywords
Clustering, Dendritic spines, Microscopy, Neuroimaging, Shape analysis, X-means, Neuroimaging, Neurons, Automated tools, Clusterings, Dendritic spine, Functional properties, Morphological characteristic, Neuronal activities, Shape classification, Shape-analysis, Structure-function relationship, X-means, Cluster analysis, FOS: Computer and information sciences, QP Physiology, Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV), Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering
Fields of Science
0301 basic medicine, 0303 health sciences, 03 medical and health sciences
Citation
WoS Q
N/A
Scopus Q
Q3

OpenCitations Citation Count
2
Source
Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)
Volume
9913 LNCS
Issue
Start Page
256
End Page
273
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CrossRef : 2
Scopus : 5
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Mendeley Readers : 19
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5
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1
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