The project involves analyzing three-dimensional brain magnetic resonance images (MRI) from the NIH’s Human Connectome Project and other sources, including data from around 700 participants. Existing computer algorithms for brain segmentation are inadequate for the choroid plexuses. Thus, the team aims to develop a specialized, fully automatic tool to efficiently and reliably evaluate large brain MRI datasets, essential for studies with many participants, such as drug trials or aging studies like the DZNE’s Rhineland Study.
The DZNE will collaborate with US institutions, particularly the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, a Harvard Medical School affiliate. The five-year project will result in software based on advanced AI, trained with example data to recognize the choroid plexuses in MRI scans. The development and validation of these algorithms are labor-intensive, highlighting the project’s comprehensive nature.