Behavioral neurogenetics research is a new method of scientific inquiry that focuses on investigation of neurodevelopmental dysfunction associated with specific genetic conditions. This research method provides a powerful tool for scientific inquiry into human gene-brain-behavior linkages that complements more traditional research approaches. In particular, the use of specific genetic conditions as models of common behavioral and cognitive disorders occurring in the general population can reveal insights into neurodevelopmental pathways that might otherwise be obscured or diluted when investigating more heterogeneous, behaviorally defined subject groups. In this paper, we review five genetic conditions that commonly give rise to identifiable neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disability in children: fragile X syndrome, velo-cardio-facial syndrome, Williams syndrome, Turner syndrome, and Klinefelter syndrome. While emphasis is placed on describing the brain morphology associated with these conditions as revealed by neuroimaging studies, we also include information pertaining to molecular genetic, postmortem, and neurobehavioral investigations to illustrate how behavioral neurogenetics research can contribute to an improved understanding of brain disorders in childhood.
Segmentation of mouse brain magnetic resonance images (MRI) based on anatomical and/or functional features is an important step towards morphogenetic brain structure characterization of murine models in neurobiological studies. State-of-the-art image segmentation methods register image volumes to standard presegmented templates or well-characterized highly detailed image atlases. Performance of these methods depends critically on the quality of skull-stripping, which is the digital removal of tissue signal exterior to the brain. This is, however, tedious to do manually and challenging to automate. Registration-based segmentation, in addition, performs poorly on small structures, low resolution images, weak signals, or faint boundaries, intrinsic to in vivo MRI scans. To address these issues, we developed an automated end-to-end pipeline called DeepBrainIPP (deep learning-based brain image processing pipeline) for 1) isolating brain volumes by stripping skull and tissue from T2w MRI images using an improved deep learning-based skull-stripping and data augmentation strategy, which enables segmentation of large brain regions by atlas or template registration, and 2) address segmentation of small brain structures, such as the paraflocculus, a small lobule of the cerebellum, for which DeepBrainIPP performs direct segmentation with a dedicated model, producing results superior to the skull-stripping/atlas-registration paradigm. We demonstrate our approach on data from both in vivo and ex vivo samples, using an in-house dataset of 172 images, expanded to 4,040 samples through data augmentation. Our skull stripping model produced an average Dice score of 0.96 and residual volume of 2.18%. This facilitated automatic registration of the skull-stripped brain to an atlas yielding an average cross-correlation of 0.98. For small brain structures, direct segmentation yielded an average Dice score of 0.89 and 5.32% residual volume error, well below the tolerance threshold for phenotype detection. Full pipeline execution is provided to non-expert users via a Web-based interface, which exposes analysis parameters, and is powered by a service that manages job submission, monitors job status and provides job history. Usability, reliability, and user experience of DeepBrainIPP was measured using the Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) and a modified PYTHEIA Scale, with a rating of excellent. DeepBrainIPP code, documentation and network weights are freely available to the research community.
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