97 research outputs found

    Towards Fast and High-quality Biomedical Image Reconstruction

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    Department of Computer Science and EngineeringReconstruction is an important module in the image analysis pipeline with purposes of isolating the majority of meaningful information that hidden inside the acquired data. The term ???reconstruction??? can be understood and subdivided in several specific tasks in different modalities. For example, in biomedical imaging, such as Computed Tomography (CT), Magnetic Resonance Image (MRI), that term stands for the transformation from the, possibly fully or under-sampled, spectral domains (sinogram for CT and k-space for MRI) to the visible image domains. Or, in connectomics, people usually refer it to segmentation (reconstructing the semantic contact between neuronal connections) or denoising (reconstructing the clean image). In this dissertation research, I will describe a set of my contributed algorithms from conventional to state-of-the-art deep learning methods, with a transition at the data-driven dictionary learning approaches that tackle the reconstruction problems in various image analysis tasks.clos

    Image Reconstructions of Compressed Sensing MRI with Multichannel Data

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    Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides high spatial resolution, high-quality of soft-tissue contrast, and multi-dimensional images. However, the speed of data acquisition limits potential applications. Compressed sensing (CS) theory allowing data being sampled at sub-Nyquist rate provides a possibility to accelerate the MRI scan time. Since most MRI scanners are currently equipped with multi-channel receiver systems, integrating CS with multi-channel systems can further shorten the scan time and also provide a better image quality. In this dissertation, we develop several techniques for integrating CS with parallel MRI. First, we propose a method which extends the reweighted l1 minimization to the CS-MRI with multi-channel data. The individual channel images are recovered according to the reweighted l1 minimization algorithm. Then, the final image is combined by the sum-of-squares method. Computer simulations show that the new method can improve the reconstruction quality at a slightly increased computation cost. Second, we propose a reconstruction approach using the ubiquitously available multi-core CPU to accelerate CS reconstructions of multiple channel data. CS reconstructions for phase array system using iterative l1 minimization are significantly time-consuming, where the computation complexity scales with the number of channels. The experimental results show that the reconstruction efficiency benefits significantly from parallelizing the CS reconstructions, and pipelining multi-channel data on multi-core processors. In our experiments, an additional speedup factor of 1.6 to 2.0 was achieved using the proposed method on a quad-core CPU. Finally, we present an efficient reconstruction method for high-dimensional CS MRI with a GPU platform to shorten the time of iterative computations. Data managements as well as the iterative algorithm are properly designed to meet the way of SIMD (single instruction/multiple data) parallelizations. For three-dimension multi-channel data, all slices along frequency encoding direction and multiple channels are highly parallelized and simultaneously processed within GPU. Generally, the runtime on GPU only requires 2.3 seconds for reconstructing a simulated 4-channel data with a volume size of 256×256×32. Comparing to 67 seconds using CPU, it achieves 28 faster with the proposed method. The rapid reconstruction algorithms demonstrated in this work are expected to help bring high dimensional, multichannel parallel CS MRI closer to clinical applications

    Multi-contrast reconstruction with Bayesian compressed sensing

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    Clinical imaging with structural MRI routinely relies on multiple acquisitions of the same region of interest under several different contrast preparations. This work presents a reconstruction algorithm based on Bayesian compressed sensing to jointly reconstruct a set of images from undersampled k-space data with higher fidelity than when the images are reconstructed either individually or jointly by a previously proposed algorithm, M-FOCUSS. The joint inference problem is formulated in a hierarchical Bayesian setting, wherein solving each of the inverse problems corresponds to finding the parameters (here, image gradient coefficients) associated with each of the images. The variance of image gradients across contrasts for a single volumetric spatial position is a single hyperparameter. All of the images from the same anatomical region, but with different contrast properties, contribute to the estimation of the hyperparameters, and once they are found, the k-space data belonging to each image are used independently to infer the image gradients. Thus, commonality of image spatial structure across contrasts is exploited without the problematic assumption of correlation across contrasts. Examples demonstrate improved reconstruction quality (up to a factor of 4 in root-mean-square error) compared with previous compressed sensing algorithms and show the benefit of joint inversion under a hierarchical Bayesian model

    Potentials and caveats of AI in Hybrid Imaging

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    State-of-the-art patient management frequently mandates the investigation of both anatomy and physiology of the patients. Hybrid imaging modalities such as the PET/MRI, PET/CT and SPECT/CT have the ability to provide both structural and functional information of the investigated tissues in a single examination. With the introduction of such advanced hardware fusion, new problems arise such as the exceedingly large amount of multi-modality data that requires novel approaches of how to extract a maximum of clinical information from large sets of multi-dimensional imaging data. Artificial intelligence (AI) has emerged as one of the leading technologies that has shown promise in facilitating highly integrative analysis of multi-parametric data. Specifically, the usefulness of AI algorithms in the medical imaging field has been heavily investigated in the realms of (1) image acquisition and reconstruction, (2) post-processing and (3) data mining and modelling. Here, we aim to provide an overview of the challenges encountered in hybrid imaging and discuss how AI algorithms can facilitate potential solutions. In addition, we highlight the pitfalls and challenges in using advanced AI algorithms in the context of hybrid imaging and provide suggestions for building robust AI solutions that enable reproducible and transparent research
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