ReMiDi: Reconstruction of Microstructure Using a Differentiable Diffusion MRI Simulator

We propose ReMiDi, a novel method for inferring neuronal microstructure as arbitrary 3D meshes using a differentiable diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) simulator. We first implemented in PyTorch a differentiable dMRI simulator that simulates the forward diffusion process using a finite-element method on an input 3D microstructure mesh. To achieve significantly faster simulations, we solve the differential equation semi-analytically using a matrix formalism approach. Given a reference dMRI signal , we use the differentiable simulator to iteratively update the input mesh such that it matches using gradient-based learning. Since directly optimizing the 3D coordinates of the vertices is challenging, particularly due to ill-posedness of the inverse problem, we instead optimize a lower-dimensional latent space representation of the mesh. The mesh is first encoded into spectral coefficients, which are further encoded into a latent using an auto-encoder, and are then decoded back into the true mesh. We present an end-to-end differentiable pipeline that simulates signals that can be tuned to match a reference signal by iteratively updating the latent representation . We demonstrate the ability to reconstruct microstructures of arbitrary shapes represented by finite-element meshes, with a focus on axonal geometries found in the brain white matter, including bending, fanning and beading fibers. Our source code is available online.
View on arXiv@article{khole2025_2502.01988, title={ ReMiDi: Reconstruction of Microstructure Using a Differentiable Diffusion MRI Simulator }, author={ Prathamesh Pradeep Khole and Zahra Kais Petiwala and Shri Prathaa Magesh and Ehsan Mirafzali and Utkarsh Gupta and Jing-Rebecca Li and Andrada Ianus and Razvan Marinescu }, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.01988}, year={ 2025 } }