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Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research

WASABI: A Metric for Evaluating Morphometric Plausibility of Synthetic Brain MRIs.

  • 2025-09-20
  • Medical image computing and computer-assisted intervention : MICCAI ... International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention 15961
    • Bahram Jafrasteh
    • Wei Peng
    • Cheng Wan
    • Yimin Luo
    • Ehsan Adeli
    • Qingyu Zhao

Study Design

Methods
Proposes a new metric WASABI using SynthSeg and Wasserstein distance to compare distributions between real and synthetic anatomies
Funding
Unclear
Generative models enhance neuroimaging through data augmentation, quality improvement, and rare condition studies. Despite advances in realistic synthetic MRIs, evaluations focus on texture and perception, lacking sensitivity to crucial morphometric fidelity. This study proposes a new metric, called WASABI (Wasserstein-Based Anatomical Brain Index), to assess the morphometric plausibility of synthetic brain MRIs. WASABI leverages SynthSeg, a deep learning-based brain parcellation tool, to derive volumetric measures of brain regions in each MRI and uses the multivariate Wasserstein distance to compare distributions between real and synthetic anatomies. Based on controlled experiments on two real datasets and synthetic MRIs from five generative models, WASABI demonstrates higher sensitivity in quantifying morphometric discrepancies compared to traditional image-level metrics, even when synthetic images achieve near-perfect visual quality. Our findings advocate for shifting the evaluation paradigm beyond visual inspection and conventional metrics, emphasizing morphometric fidelity as a crucial benchmark for clinically meaningful brain MRI synthesis. Our code is available at https://github.com/BahramJafrasteh/wasabi-mri.

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