Anatomical space conventions made easy.
Working with anatomical images, one often encounters the problem of matching the orientation of stacks with different conventions about axes orientation and order. Moreover, when multiple swaps and flips are involved, it can be annoying to map the same transformations to volumes and points (e.g., coordinates or meshes).
brainglobe-space
provides a neat way of defining an anatomical space, and of operating stacks and point transformations between spaces.
You can install brainglobe-space
with:
pip install brainglobe-space
To define a new anatomical space, it is sufficient to give the directions of the stack origin position:
source_origin = ("Left", "Superior", "Anterior")
target_origin = ("Inferior", "Posterior", "Right")
A stack can be then easily transformed from the source to the target space:
import brainglobe_space as bg
import numpy as np
stack = np.random.rand(3, 2, 4)
mapped_stack = bg.map_stack_to(source_origin, target_origin, stack)
The transformation is handled only with numpy index operations; i.e., no complex image affine transformations are applied. This is often useful as the preparatory step for starting any kind of image registration.
A shortened syntax can be used to define a space using initials of the origin directions:
mapped_stack = bg.map_stack_to("lsa", "ipr", stack)
When you work with a stack, the origin is the upper left corner when you show the first element stack[0, :, :]
with matplotlib or when you open the stack with ImageJ. First dimension is the one that you are slicing, the second the height of the image, and the third the width of the image.
Sometimes, together with the stack we have to move a set of points (cell coordinates, meshes, etc.). This introduces the additional complexity of keeping track, together with the axes swaps and flips, of the change of the origin offset.
To handle this situation, we can define a source space using the AnatomicalSpace
class, specifying also the stack shape:
stack = np.random.rand(3, 2, 4) # a stack in source space
annotations = np.array([[0, 0, 0], [2, 1, 3]]) # related point annotations
source_space = bg.AnatomicalSpace(source_origin, stack.shape)
mapped_stack = source_space.map_stack_to("ipr", stack) # transform the stack
mapped_annotations = source_space.map_points_to("ipr", annotations) # transform the points
The points are transformed through the generation of a transformation matrix. Finally, if we want to log this matrix (e.g., to reconstruct the full transformations sequence of a registration), we can get it:
target_space = bg.AnatomicalSpace("ipr", stack.shape)
transformation_matrix = source_space.transformation_matrix_to(target_space)
# equivalent to:
transformation_matrix = source_space.transformation_matrix_to("ipr", stack.shape)
The target get always be defined as a bg.AnatomicalSpace
object, or a valid origin specification plus a shape (the shape is required only if axes flips are required).
The AnatomicalSpace
class can deal also with stack resampling/padding/cropping. This requires simply specifying values for resolutions and offsets when instantiating a AnatomicalSpace
object. Once that is done, using AnatomicalSpace.transformation_matrix_to
creating affine transformation matrices from one space to the other will be a piece of cake!
source_space = bgs.AnatomicalSpace("asl", resolution=(2, 1, 2), offset=(1, 0, 0))
target_space = bgs.AnatomicalSpace("sal", resolution=(1, 1, 1), offset=(0, 0, 2))
source_space.transformation_matrix_to(target_space)
Moreover, we can now use those space objects to resample stacks, and to generate stacks matching a target shape with the correct padding/cropping simply by specifying a target offset:
source_space = bgs.AnatomicalSpace("asl", resolution=(2, 1, 2), offset=(1, 0, 0))
target_space = bgs.AnatomicalSpace("asl", resolution=(1, 1, 1), shape=(5, 4, 2)) # we need a target shape
source_space.transformation_matrix_to(target_space, stack, to_target_shape=True)
Finally, another convenient feature of BGSpace is the possibility of iterating easily through the projections of the stack and generate section names and axes labels:
sc = bg.AnatomicalSpace("asl") # origin for the stack to be plotted
for i, (plane, labels) in enumerate(zip(sc.sections, sc.axis_labels)):
axs[i].imshow(stack.mean(i))
axs[i].set_title(f"{plane.capitalize()} view")
axs[i].set_ylabel(labels[0])
axs[i].set_xlabel(labels[1])
We are always happy to help users of our tools, and welcome any contributions. If you would like to get in contact with us for any reason, please see the contact page of our website.
If you find brainglobe-space useful, please cite the following DOI:
Petrucco, L., & BrainGlobe Developers. (2024). brainglobe-space. Zenodo. https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.4552536