(Press-News.org) HOUSTON – (Oct. 14, 2025) – When doctors analyze a medical scan of an organ or area in the body, each part of the image has to be assigned an anatomical label. If the brain is under scrutiny for instance, its different parts have to be labeled as such, pixel by pixel: cerebral cortex, brain stem, cerebellum, etc. The process, called medical image segmentation, guides diagnosis, surgery planning and research.
In the days before artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML), clinicians performed this crucial yet painstaking and time-consuming task by hand, but over the past decade, U-nets ⎯ a type of AI architecture specifically designed for medical image segmentation ⎯ have been the go-to instead. However, U-nets require large amounts of data and resources to be trained.
“For large and/or 3D images, these demands are costly,” said Kushal Vyas, a Rice electrical and computer engineering doctoral student and first author on a paper presented at the Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention Society, or MICCAI, the leading conference in the field. “In this study, we proposed MetaSeg, a completely new way of performing image segmentation.”
In experiments using 2D and 3D brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data, MetaSeg was shown to achieve the same segmentation performance as U-Nets while needing 90% fewer parameters ⎯ the key variables AI/ML models derive from training data and use to identify patterns and make predictions.
The study, titled “Fit Pixels, Get Labels: Meta-learned Implicit Networks for Image Segmentation,” won the best paper award at MICCAI, getting recognized from a pool of over 1,000 accepted submissions.
“Instead of U-Nets, MetaSeg leverages implicit neural representations ⎯ a neural network framework that has hitherto not been thought useful or explored for image segmentation,” Vyas said.
An implicit neural representation (INR) is an AI network that interprets a medical image as a mathematical formula that accounts for the signal value (color, brightness, etc.) of each and every pixel in a 2D image or every voxel in a 3D one.
While INRs offer a very detailed yet compact way to represent information, they are also highly specific, meaning they typically only work well for the single signal/image they trained on: An INR trained on a brain MRI cannot typically generalize rules about what different parts of the brain look like, so if provided with an image of a different brain, the INR would typically falter.
“INRs have been used in the computer vision and medical imaging communities for tasks such as 3D scene reconstruction and signal compression, which only require modeling one signal at a time,” Vyas said. “However, it was not obvious before MetaSeg how to use them for tasks such as segmentation, which require learning patterns over many signals.”
To make it useful for medical image segmentation, the researchers taught INRs to predict both the signal values and the specific segmentation labels for a given image. To do so, they used meta-learning, an AI training strategy whose literal translation is “learning to learn” that helps models rapidly adapt to new information.
“We prime the INR model parameters in such a way so that they are further optimized on an unseen image at test time, which enables the model to decode the image features into accurate labels,” Vyas said.
This special training allows the INRs to not only quickly adjust themselves to match the pixels or voxels of a previously unseen medical image but to then also decode its labels, instantly predicting where the outlines for different anatomical regions should go.
“MetaSeg offers a fresh, scalable perspective to the field of medical image segmentation that has been dominated for a decade by U-Nets,” said Guha Balakrishnan, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rice and a member of the university’s Ken Kennedy Institute. “Our research results promise to make medical image segmentation far more cost-effective while delivering top performance.”
Balakrishnan, the corresponding author on the study, is part of a thriving ecosystem of Rice researchers at the forefront of digital health innovation, which includes the Digital Health Initiative and the joint Rice-Houston Methodist Digital Health Institute. Ashok Veeraraghavan, chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and professor of electrical and computer engineering and computer science at Rice, is also an author on the study.
While MetaSeg can be applied to a range of imaging contexts, its demonstrated potential to enhance brain imaging illustrates the kind of research Proposition 14 ⎯ on the ballot in Texas Nov. 4 ⎯ could help expand statewide.
The research was supported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (R01DE032051), the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (D24AC00296) and the National Science Foundation (2107313, 1648449). The content herein is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funding organizations and institutions.
-30-
This news release can be found online at news.rice.edu.
Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews.
Peer-reviewed paper:
Fit Pixels, Get Labels: Meta-learned Implicit Networks for Image Segmentation | The Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention Society - MICCAI 2025 | DOI: 10.1007/978-3-032-04947-6_19
Authors: Kushal Vyas, Ashok Veeraraghavan, Guha Balakrishnan
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-032-04947-6_19
Access associated media files:
https://rice.box.com/s/po3ew9sf4mpgxfhdh2i2k0t7wd0vp2ke
(Photos by Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)
About Rice:
Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Texas, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation’s top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of architecture, business, continuing studies, engineering and computing, humanities, music, natural sciences and social sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. Internationally, the university maintains the Rice Global Paris Center, a hub for innovative collaboration, research and inspired teaching located in the heart of Paris. With 4,776 undergraduates and 4,104 graduate students, Rice’s undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is just under 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice is ranked No. 1 for lots of race/class interaction and No. 7 for best-run colleges by the Princeton Review. Rice is also rated as a best value among private universities by the Wall Street Journal and is included on Forbes’ exclusive list of “New Ivies.”
END
New AI tool makes medical imaging process 90% more efficient
Rice approach sets standard for brain and other medical imaging
2025-10-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Nitrogen-fortified nanobiochar boosts soil health and rice productivity
2025-10-14
A new study in Biochar reveals that nitrogen-fortified nanobiochar could significantly improve soil fertility and rice yields while reducing dependence on synthetic fertilizers. Researchers from Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, India, found that combining a reduced nitrogen fertilizer dose with nanobiochar enhanced both soil properties and crop performance in nitrogen-deficient soils.
Nanobiochar, biochar particles engineered at the nanoscale, has attracted attention for its porous ...
Generative art enhances virtual shopping experience
2025-10-14
ITHACA, N.Y. – Art infusion theory – the idea that displaying art in retail settings can positively impact consumer behavior – can be applied to the metaverse with similar results, a Cornell design researcher has shown.
Employing algorithm-fueled generative art, So-Yeon Yoon, professor of human centered design at Cornell University, found that the installation in a virtual store enhanced perceptions of exclusivity and aesthetic pleasure for both mass-market and luxury retailers.
“When we think about art, we think it’s more closely aligned with the luxury market,” ...
Fluid-based laser scanning for brain imaging
2025-10-14
Darwin Quiroz is exploring new frontiers in miniature lasers with major biomedical applications.
When Quiroz first started working with optics as an undergraduate, he was developing atomic magnetometers. That experience sparked a growing curiosity about how light interacts with matter, an interest that has now led him to a new technique in optical imaging.
Quiroz, a PhD student in the Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder, is co-first author of a new study that demonstrates how a fluid-based optical device known as an electrowetting prism can be used to steer lasers at high speeds for advanced imaging applications.
The ...
Concordia study links urban heat in Montreal to unequal greenspace access
2025-10-14
Trees are essential to cooling down cities. However, a study by Concordia researchers at the Next Generation Cities Institute and the Loyola Sustainability Research Centre shows how tree distribution influences how some residents benefit more from them than others.
In a paper published Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, the authors studied the layout of Montreal’s vegetation — its trees, shrubs and grass — and compared it to daytime temperature readings on the ground, or land surface.
Using ...
Hidden patterns link ribosomal RNAs to genes of the nervous system
2025-10-14
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is a type of molecule and a key building block of the ribosome, the cell’s protein-making machinery. rRNA accounts for much of the RNA in a cell, and it’s crucial for life.
“It’s essentially one of the most important molecules that we have,” says Thomas Jefferson University researcher Isidore Rigoutsos, PhD. “But for nearly seven decades, we thought rRNA was only relevant to the ribosome.”
Now, a new study from Dr. Rigoutsos’ lab ...
Why does losing the Y chromosome make some cancers worse? New $6.5 million NIH grant could provide clues
2025-10-14
TUCSON, Ariz. — University of Arizona Cancer Center researchers will study the potential effects of the loss of the Y chromosome in the development and progression of bladder cancer thanks to a grant of up to $6.5 million over seven years from the National Cancer Institute.
Dr. Dan Theodorescu, the Nancy C. and Craig M. Berge Endowed Chair for the Director of the Cancer Center, was awarded the NCI Outstanding Investigator Award, which is given to allow “substantial time for funded investigators to take greater ...
Xiao receives David W. Robertson Award for Excellence in Medicinal Chemistry
2025-10-14
Rice University’s Han Xiao has been awarded the David W. Robertson Award for Excellence in Medicinal Chemistry by the American Chemical Society’s (ACS) Division of Medicinal Chemistry, recognizing Xiao’s pioneering contributions to therapeutic discovery.
The biennial award honors scientists under 40 who have played a significant role in developing novel therapeutic agents or concepts. Xiao will receive a $6,000 honorarium, a commemorative plaque and travel support to attend the ACS award ceremony March 24, 2026, in Atlanta.
“Receiving ...
Boron isotopes reveal how nuclear waste glass slowly dissolves over time
2025-10-14
A new study has uncovered how tiny differences in boron atoms can help scientists better predict the long-term behavior of glass used to store hazardous waste. The findings, published in Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes, could improve forecasts of how radioactive materials are released from storage over thousands of years.
Glass is often used to immobilize contaminants such as radionuclides and heavy metals, locking them safely inside a stable structure. However, when groundwater seeps into disposal sites, the glass can gradually dissolve. Understanding this process is crucial for ensuring the safety of geological ...
Biochar helps Mediterranean vineyards hold water and fight erosion
2025-10-14
Mediterranean vineyards face a growing threat from heavy rains and soil degradation that strip away fertile topsoil. New research led by scientists at the University of Aveiro, Portugal, shows that adding biochar, a carbon-rich material made from plant waste, can dramatically reduce erosion and improve the soil’s ability to store water.
The study, published in Biochar, is among the first to test biochar’s impact on the “soil sponge function” under natural rainfall in sloping Mediterranean vineyards. Over 18 months, researchers used outdoor lysimeters filled with vineyard ...
Checking the quality of materials just got easier with a new AI tool
2025-10-14
Manufacturing better batteries, faster electronics, and more effective pharmaceuticals depends on the discovery of new materials and the verification of their quality. Artificial intelligence is helping with the former, with tools that comb through catalogs of materials to quickly tag promising candidates.
But once a material is made, verifying its quality still involves scanning it with specialized instruments to validate its performance — an expensive and time-consuming step that can hold up the development and distribution of new technologies.
Now, a new AI tool developed by MIT ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Evidence builds for disrupted mitochondria as cause of Parkinson’s
SwRI turbocharges its hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine
Parasitic ant tricks workers into killing their queen, then takes the throne
New study identifies part of brain animals use to make inferences
Reducing arsenic in drinking water cuts risk of death, even after years of chronic exposure
Lower arsenic in drinking water reduces death risk, even after years of chronic exposure
Lowering arsenic levels in groundwater decreases death rates from chronic disease
Arsenic exposure reduction and chronic disease mortality
Parasitic matricide, ants chemically compel host workers to kill their own queen
Clinical trials affected by research grant terminations at the National Institutes of Health
Racial and ethnic disparities in cesarean birth trends in the United States
Light-intensity-dependent transformation of mesoscopic molecular assemblies
Tirzepatide may only temporarily suppress brain activity involved in “food noise”
Do all countries benefit from clinical trials? A new Yale study examines the data
Consensus on the management of liver injury associated with targeted drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors for hepatocellular carcinoma (version 2024)
Bridging the gap to bionic motion: challenges in legged robot limb unit design, modeling, and control
New study reveals high rates of fabricated and inaccurate citations in LLM-generated mental health research
New 'heart percentile' calculator helps young adults grasp their long-term risk
SwRI expands capabilities in large-scale heat exchanger testing
CRISPR breakthrough reverses chemotherapy resistance in lung cancer
Study reveals potential and beauty of the world unseen
Duke-NUS study: Over 90% of older adults with dementia undergo burdensome interventions in their final year
Not all PTSD therapies keep veterans in treatment, study warns
New research shows how friends’ support protects intercultural couples
FAU Engineering secures NIH grant to explore how the brain learns to ‘see’
One of world’s most detailed virtual brain simulations is changing how we study the brain
How early morning practices affect college athletes’ sleep
Expanded effort will help standardize, improve care for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
World COPD Day: November 19, 2025
Study shows people support higher taxes after understanding benefits of public goods
[Press-News.org] New AI tool makes medical imaging process 90% more efficientRice approach sets standard for brain and other medical imaging