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    Three Dimensional Local Measurements of Bone Strain and Displacement: Comparison of Three Digital Volume Correlation Approaches

    Source: Journal of Biomechanical Engineering:;2015:;volume( 137 ):;issue: 007::page 71006
    Author:
    Palanca, Marco
    ,
    Tozzi, Gianluca
    ,
    Cristofolini, Luca
    ,
    Viceconti, Marco
    ,
    Dall'Ara, Enrico
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4030174
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Different digital volume correlation (DVC) approaches are currently available or under development for bone tissue micromechanics. The aim of this study was to compare accuracy and precision errors of three DVC approaches for a particular threedimensional (3D) zerostrain condition. Trabecular and cortical bone specimens were repeatedly scanned with a microcomputed tomography (CT). The errors affecting computed displacements and strains were extracted for a known virtual translation, as well as for repeated scans. Three DVC strategies were tested: two local approaches, based on fastFouriertransform (DaVisFFT) or directcorrelation (DaVisDC), and a global approach based on elastic registration and a finite element (FE) solver (ShIRTFE). Different computation subvolume sizes were tested. Much larger errors were found for the repeated scans than for the virtual translation test. For each algorithm, errors decreased asymptotically for larger subvolume sizes in the range explored. Considering this particular set of images, ShIRTFE showed an overall better accuracy and precision (a few hundreds microstrain for a subvolume of 50 voxels). When the largest subvolume (50–52 voxels) was applied to cortical bone, the accuracy error obtained for repeated scans with ShIRTFE was approximately half of that for the best local approach (DaVisDC). The difference was lower (250 microstrain) in the case of trabecular bone. In terms of precision, the errors shown by DaVisDC were closer to the ones computed by ShIRTFE (differences of 131 microstrain and 157 microstrain for cortical and trabecular bone, respectively). The multipass computation available for DaVis software improved the accuracy and precision only for the DaVisFFT in the virtual translation, particularly for trabecular bone. The better accuracy and precision of ShIRTFE, followed by DaVisDC, were obtained with a higher computational cost when compared to DaVisFFT. The results underline the importance of performing a quantitative comparison of DVC methods on the same set of samples by using also repeated scans, other than virtual translation tests only. ShIRTFE provides the most accurate and precise results for this set of images. However, both DaVis approaches show reasonable results for large nodal spacing, particularly for trabecular bone. Finally, this study highlights the importance of using sufficiently large subvolumes, in order to achieve better accuracy and precision.
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      Three Dimensional Local Measurements of Bone Strain and Displacement: Comparison of Three Digital Volume Correlation Approaches

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    • Journal of Biomechanical Engineering

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    contributor authorPalanca, Marco
    contributor authorTozzi, Gianluca
    contributor authorCristofolini, Luca
    contributor authorViceconti, Marco
    contributor authorDall'Ara, Enrico
    date accessioned2017-05-09T01:15:16Z
    date available2017-05-09T01:15:16Z
    date issued2015
    identifier issn0148-0731
    identifier otherbio_137_07_071006.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/157146
    description abstractDifferent digital volume correlation (DVC) approaches are currently available or under development for bone tissue micromechanics. The aim of this study was to compare accuracy and precision errors of three DVC approaches for a particular threedimensional (3D) zerostrain condition. Trabecular and cortical bone specimens were repeatedly scanned with a microcomputed tomography (CT). The errors affecting computed displacements and strains were extracted for a known virtual translation, as well as for repeated scans. Three DVC strategies were tested: two local approaches, based on fastFouriertransform (DaVisFFT) or directcorrelation (DaVisDC), and a global approach based on elastic registration and a finite element (FE) solver (ShIRTFE). Different computation subvolume sizes were tested. Much larger errors were found for the repeated scans than for the virtual translation test. For each algorithm, errors decreased asymptotically for larger subvolume sizes in the range explored. Considering this particular set of images, ShIRTFE showed an overall better accuracy and precision (a few hundreds microstrain for a subvolume of 50 voxels). When the largest subvolume (50–52 voxels) was applied to cortical bone, the accuracy error obtained for repeated scans with ShIRTFE was approximately half of that for the best local approach (DaVisDC). The difference was lower (250 microstrain) in the case of trabecular bone. In terms of precision, the errors shown by DaVisDC were closer to the ones computed by ShIRTFE (differences of 131 microstrain and 157 microstrain for cortical and trabecular bone, respectively). The multipass computation available for DaVis software improved the accuracy and precision only for the DaVisFFT in the virtual translation, particularly for trabecular bone. The better accuracy and precision of ShIRTFE, followed by DaVisDC, were obtained with a higher computational cost when compared to DaVisFFT. The results underline the importance of performing a quantitative comparison of DVC methods on the same set of samples by using also repeated scans, other than virtual translation tests only. ShIRTFE provides the most accurate and precise results for this set of images. However, both DaVis approaches show reasonable results for large nodal spacing, particularly for trabecular bone. Finally, this study highlights the importance of using sufficiently large subvolumes, in order to achieve better accuracy and precision.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleThree Dimensional Local Measurements of Bone Strain and Displacement: Comparison of Three Digital Volume Correlation Approaches
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume137
    journal issue7
    journal titleJournal of Biomechanical Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4030174
    journal fristpage71006
    journal lastpage71006
    identifier eissn1528-8951
    treeJournal of Biomechanical Engineering:;2015:;volume( 137 ):;issue: 007
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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