NeuralBoneReg: An Instance-Specific Label-Free Point Cloud-Based Method for Multi-Modal Bone Surface Registration
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 07:39 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
NeuralBoneReg performs accurate multi-modal bone surface registration in a self-supervised, instance-specific manner using point clouds and neural distance fields.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central discovery is that an instance-specific neural unsigned distance field representing the preoperative bone surface, paired with an MLP registration module, can recover rigid transformations to align intraoperative point clouds from heterogeneous modalities, achieving the reported error levels on the evaluated datasets without inter-subject training data.
What carries the argument
Implicit neural unsigned distance field (UDF) for the preoperative bone combined with MLP-based hypothesis generation for rigid transformations.
If this is right
- It operates without inter-subject training data, relying only on the specific instance.
- It achieves mean RRE/RTE of 1.83°/2.02 mm on UltraBones100k dataset.
- It generalizes to hip and spine anatomies with errors of 1.90°/1.56 mm and 3.78°/2.80 mm respectively.
- It supports both global initialization and local refinement stages.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Surgeons could potentially use this to reduce reliance on manual alignment steps.
- Extension to non-rigid deformations might be possible if the UDF representation is adapted accordingly.
- The method's performance on very sparse point clouds remains to be tested in practice.
- Integration into existing CAOS software could streamline workflow if inference times are acceptable.
Load-bearing premise
Point clouds derived from different modalities provide sufficiently complete and consistent surface information for the neural model to determine the correct rigid alignment without correspondences.
What would settle it
A test on a new dataset where the intraoperative point cloud is significantly incomplete or noisy, resulting in registration errors exceeding 5 degrees or 5 mm, would falsify the claim of robust cross-modal performance.
Figures
read the original abstract
In computer- and robot-assisted orthopedic surgery (CAOS), patient-specific surgical plans derived from preoperative imaging define target locations and implant trajectories. During surgery, these plans must be accurately transferred, relying on precise cross-registration between preoperative and intraoperative data. However, substantial modality heterogeneity across imaging modalities makes this registration challenging and error-prone. Robust, automatic, and modality-agnostic bone surface registration is therefore clinically important. We propose NeuralBoneReg, a self-supervised, surface-based framework that registers bone surfaces using 3D point clouds as a modality-agnostic representation. NeuralBoneReg includes two modules: an implicit neural unsigned distance field (UDF) that learns the preoperative bone model, and an MLP-based registration module that performs global initialization and local refinement by generating transformation hypotheses to align the intraoperative point cloud with the neural UDF. Unlike SOTA supervised methods, NeuralBoneReg operates in a self-supervised manner, without requiring inter-subject training data. We evaluated NeuralBoneReg against baseline methods on two publicly available multi-modal datasets: a CT-ultrasound dataset of the fibula and tibia (UltraBones100k) and a CT-RGB-D dataset of spinal vertebrae (SpineDepth). The evaluation also includes a newly introduced CT-ultrasound dataset of cadaveric subjects containing femur and pelvis (UltraBones-Hip), which will be made publicly available. NeuralBoneReg matches or surpasses existing methods across all datasets, achieving mean RRE/RTE of 1.83{\deg}/2.02 mm on UltraBones100k, 1.90{\deg}/1.56 mm on UltraBones-Hip, and 3.78{\deg}/2.80 mm on SpineDepth. These results demonstrate strong generalizability across anatomies and modalities, providing robust and accurate cross-modal alignment for CAOS.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes NeuralBoneReg, a self-supervised, instance-specific framework for multi-modal bone surface registration in CAOS. It represents preoperative bone surfaces via an implicit neural unsigned distance field (UDF) learned from point clouds and uses an MLP to generate transformation hypotheses for global initialization and local refinement, aligning intraoperative point clouds without inter-subject labels or explicit correspondences. The method is evaluated on UltraBones100k (CT-US), a new UltraBones-Hip dataset (CT-US of femur/pelvis), and SpineDepth (CT-RGB-D), claiming to match or surpass baselines with mean RRE/RTE of 1.83°/2.02 mm, 1.90°/1.56 mm, and 3.78°/2.80 mm respectively.
Significance. If the results hold, the work offers a clinically relevant advance by enabling modality-agnostic registration without large labeled inter-subject datasets, a strength given the heterogeneity in CAOS imaging. The self-supervised UDF+MLP design and public release of UltraBones-Hip are positive contributions that could reduce reliance on supervised training.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central performance claim (matching or surpassing SOTA with the listed RRE/RTE values) rests on the unverified precondition that point clouds extracted from ultrasound and RGB-D are sufficiently complete, dense, and geometrically consistent with CT surfaces for the neural UDF to yield a usable loss landscape and for the MLP to converge reliably; no analysis, ablation, or discussion of partial coverage, density variation, or modality artifacts is provided to support this.
- [Results] Results (as summarized): the reported mean errors lack standard deviations, error bars, statistical significance tests against baselines, or details on data exclusion rules, making it impossible to verify whether the competitive numbers are robust or driven by favorable cases.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract and method description would benefit from explicit notation for the UDF loss and MLP hypothesis generation to clarify the self-supervised objective.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive feedback. We address the two major comments point by point below, indicating where revisions will be made to strengthen the manuscript. Both comments identify areas where additional analysis or reporting would improve clarity and verifiability.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central performance claim (matching or surpassing SOTA with the listed RRE/RTE values) rests on the unverified precondition that point clouds extracted from ultrasound and RGB-D are sufficiently complete, dense, and geometrically consistent with CT surfaces for the neural UDF to yield a usable loss landscape and for the MLP to converge reliably; no analysis, ablation, or discussion of partial coverage, density variation, or modality artifacts is provided to support this.
Authors: We agree that the abstract's performance claims implicitly rely on the quality of the extracted intraoperative point clouds. The full manuscript describes the point-cloud extraction pipelines for each dataset (UltraBones100k, UltraBones-Hip, SpineDepth) and notes that these are real clinical acquisitions, but it does not include dedicated analysis of coverage, density variation, or artifact effects. To address this, we will add a new subsection in the Experiments section that (i) quantifies point-cloud coverage and density statistics across the test cases, (ii) discusses modality-specific artifacts observed in the data, and (iii) reports an ablation on registration accuracy under controlled down-sampling and partial-view conditions. This will make the precondition explicit and provide supporting evidence. revision: yes
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Referee: [Results] Results (as summarized): the reported mean errors lack standard deviations, error bars, statistical significance tests against baselines, or details on data exclusion rules, making it impossible to verify whether the competitive numbers are robust or driven by favorable cases.
Authors: The current manuscript reports only mean RRE/RTE values. We acknowledge that the absence of standard deviations, error bars, statistical tests, and explicit data-exclusion criteria limits assessment of robustness. In the revised version we will (i) report mean ± standard deviation for all metrics, (ii) include error-bar plots in the result figures, (iii) add paired statistical significance tests (e.g., Wilcoxon signed-rank) against the baselines, and (iv) state the data-exclusion rules (if any) applied during evaluation. These additions will be placed in the Results and supplementary material. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; self-supervised method and dataset evaluations remain independent
full rationale
The paper presents NeuralBoneReg as a self-supervised framework (neural UDF for preoperative model + MLP hypothesis generator for registration) and reports empirical registration errors on held-out public and newly introduced datasets. No equations reduce the reported RRE/RTE values to quantities fitted from the evaluation data itself, no self-citation chain bears the central claim, and the modality-agnostic point-cloud assumption is stated as a precondition rather than derived by construction from the results. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- UDF and MLP network hyperparameters
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Neural networks can learn a faithful unsigned distance field representation of bone geometry from a single preoperative scan
- domain assumption Point clouds from different modalities share a common rigid transformation to the preoperative surface
Reference graph
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