Publication | Open Access
Two-Stream Graph Convolutional Network for Intra-Oral Scanner Image Segmentation
53
Citations
39
References
2021
Year
Geometric LearningConvolutional Neural NetworkPrecise SegmentationMachine LearningEngineeringImage AnalysisData SciencePattern RecognitionRaw Geometric AttributesVideo TransformerRadiologyHealth SciencesMachine VisionMedical ImagingFeature LearningDeep LearningMedical Image ComputingComputer VisionMesh CellsGraph Neural NetworkMedical Image AnalysisImage Segmentation
Precise segmentation of teeth from intra-oral scanner images is an essential task in computer-aided orthodontic surgical planning. The state-of-the-art deep learning-based methods often simply concatenate the raw geometric attributes (i.e., coordinates and normal vectors) of mesh cells to train a single-stream network for automatic intra-oral scanner image segmentation. However, since different raw attributes reveal completely different geometric information, the naive concatenation of different raw attributes at the (low-level) input stage may bring unnecessary confusion in describing and differentiating between mesh cells, thus hampering the learning of high-level geometric representations for the segmentation task. To address this issue, we design a two-stream graph convolutional network (i.e., TSGCN), which can effectively handle inter-view confusion between different raw attributes to more effectively fuse their complementary information and learn discriminative multi-view geometric representations. Specifically, our TSGCN adopts two input-specific graph-learning streams to extract complementary high-level geometric representations from coordinates and normal vectors, respectively. Then, these single-view representations are further fused by a self-attention module to adaptively balance the contributions of different views in learning more discriminative multi-view representations for accurate and fully automatic tooth segmentation. We have evaluated our TSGCN on a real-patient dataset of dental (mesh) models acquired by 3D intraoral scanners. Experimental results show that our TSGCN significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods in 3D tooth (surface) segmentation.
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