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Fully Differentiable dMRI Streamline Propagation in PyTorch.

April 3, 2026pubmed logopapers

Authors

Yoon J,McMaster EM,Kim ME,Rudravaram G,Schilling KG,Landman BA,Moyer D

Affiliations (4)

  • Department of Computer Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
  • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
  • Department of Radiology and Radiological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
  • Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.

Abstract

Diffusion MRI (dMRI) provides a distinctive means to probe the microstructural architecture of living tissue, facilitating applications such as brain connectivity analysis, modeling across multiple conditions, and the estimation of macrostructural features. Tractography, which emerged in the final years of the 20th century and accelerated in the early 21st century, is a technique for visualizing white matter pathways in the brain using dMRI. Most diffusion tractography methods rely on procedural streamline propagators or global energy minimization methods. Although recent advancements in deep learning have enabled tasks that were previously challenging, existing tractography approaches are often non-differentiable, limiting their integration in end-to-end learning frameworks. While progress has been made in representing streamlines in differentiable frameworks, no existing method offers fully differentiable propagation. In this work, we propose a fully differentiable solution that retains numerical fidelity with a leading streamline algorithm. The key is that our PyTorch-engineered streamline propagator has no components that block gradient flow, making it fully differentiable. We show that our method matches standard propagators while remaining differentiable. By translating streamline propagation into a differentiable PyTorch framework, we enable deeper integration of tractography into deep learning workflows, laying the foundation for a new category of macrostructural reasoning that is not only computationally robust but also scientifically rigorous.

Topics

Journal Article

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