30 research outputs found

    Effective deep learning training for single-image super-resolution in endomicroscopy exploiting video-registration-based reconstruction

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    PURPOSE: Probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) is a recent imaging modality that allows performing in vivo optical biopsies. The design of pCLE hardware, and its reliance on an optical fibre bundle, fundamentally limits the image quality with a few tens of thousands fibres, each acting as the equivalent of a single-pixel detector, assembled into a single fibre bundle. Video registration techniques can be used to estimate high-resolution (HR) images by exploiting the temporal information contained in a sequence of low-resolution (LR) images. However, the alignment of LR frames, required for the fusion, is computationally demanding and prone to artefacts. METHODS: In this work, we propose a novel synthetic data generation approach to train exemplar-based Deep Neural Networks (DNNs). HR pCLE images with enhanced quality are recovered by the models trained on pairs of estimated HR images (generated by the video registration algorithm) and realistic synthetic LR images. Performance of three different state-of-the-art DNNs techniques were analysed on a Smart Atlas database of 8806 images from 238 pCLE video sequences. The results were validated through an extensive image quality assessment that takes into account different quality scores, including a Mean Opinion Score (MOS). RESULTS: Results indicate that the proposed solution produces an effective improvement in the quality of the obtained reconstructed image. CONCLUSION: The proposed training strategy and associated DNNs allows us to perform convincing super-resolution of pCLE images

    Effective deep learning training for single-image super-resolution in endomicroscopy exploiting video-registration-based reconstruction

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    Purpose: Probe-based Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (pCLE) is a recent imaging modality that allows performing in vivo optical biopsies. The design of pCLE hardware, and its reliance on an optical fibre bundle, fundamentally limits the image quality with a few tens of thousands fibres, each acting as the equivalent of a single-pixel detector, assembled into a single fibre bundle. Video-registration techniques can be used to estimate high-resolution (HR) images by exploiting the temporal information contained in a sequence of low-resolution (LR) images. However, the alignment of LR frames, required for the fusion, is computationally demanding and prone to artefacts. Methods: In this work, we propose a novel synthetic data generation approach to train exemplar-based Deep Neural Networks (DNNs). HR pCLE images with enhanced quality are recovered by the models trained on pairs of estimated HR images (generated by the video-registration algorithm) and realistic synthetic LR images. Performance of three different state-of-the-art DNNs techniques were analysed on a Smart Atlas database of 8806 images from 238 pCLE video sequences. The results were validated through an extensive Image Quality Assessment (IQA) that takes into account different quality scores, including a Mean Opinion Score (MOS). Results: Results indicate that the proposed solution produces an effective improvement in the quality of the obtained reconstructed image. Conclusion: The proposed training strategy and associated DNNs allows us to perform convincing super-resolution of pCLE images

    Adversarial training with cycle consistency for unsupervised super-resolution in endomicroscopy

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    In recent years, endomicroscopy has become increasingly used for diagnostic purposes and interventional guidance. It can provide intraoperative aids for real-time tissue characterization and can help to perform visual investigations aimed for example to discover epithelial cancers. Due to physical constraints on the acquisition process, endomicroscopy images, still today have a low number of informative pixels which hampers their quality. Post-processing techniques, such as Super-Resolution (SR), are a potential solution to increase the quality of these images. SR techniques are often supervised, requiring aligned pairs of low-resolution (LR) and high-resolution (HR) images patches to train a model. However, in our domain, the lack of HR images hinders the collection of such pairs and makes supervised training unsuitable. For this reason, we propose an unsupervised SR framework based on an adversarial deep neural network with a physically-inspired cycle consistency, designed to impose some acquisition properties on the super-resolved images. Our framework can exploit HR images, regardless of the domain where they are coming from, to transfer the quality of the HR images to the initial LR images. This property can be particularly useful in all situations where pairs of LR/HR are not available during the training. Our quantitative analysis, validated using a database of 238 endomicroscopy video sequences from 143 patients, shows the ability of the pipeline to produce convincing super-resolved images. A Mean Opinion Score (MOS) study also confirms this quantitative image quality assessment.Comment: Accepted for publication on Medical Image Analysis journa

    Online Super-Resolution For Fibre-Bundle-Based Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy

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    Probe-based Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (pCLE) produces microscopic images enabling real-time in vivo optical biopsy. However, the miniaturisation of the optical hardware, specifically the reliance on an optical fibre bundle as an imaging guide, fundamentally limits image quality by producing artefacts, noise, and relatively low contrast and resolution. The reconstruction approaches in clinical pCLE products do not fully alleviate these problems. Consequently, image quality remains a barrier that curbs the full potential of pCLE. Enhancing the image quality of pCLE in real-time remains a challenge. The research in this thesis is a response to this need. I have developed dedicated online super-resolution methods that account for the physics of the image acquisition process. These methods have the potential to replace existing reconstruction algorithms without interfering with the fibre design or the hardware of the device. In this thesis, novel processing pipelines are proposed for enhancing the image quality of pCLE. First, I explored a learning-based super-resolution method that relies on mapping from the low to the high-resolution space. Due to the lack of high-resolution pCLE, I proposed to simulate high-resolution data and use it as a ground truth model that is based on the pCLE acquisition physics. However, pCLE images are reconstructed from irregularly distributed fibre signals, and grid-based Convolutional Neural Networks are not designed to take irregular data as input. To alleviate this problem, I designed a new trainable layer that embeds Nadaraya- Watson regression. Finally, I proposed a novel blind super-resolution approach by deploying unsupervised zero-shot learning accompanied by a down-sampling kernel crafted for pCLE. I evaluated these new methods in two ways: a robust image quality assessment and a perceptual quality test assessed by clinical experts. The results demonstrate that the proposed super-resolution pipelines are superior to the current reconstruction algorithm in terms of image quality and clinician preference

    Zero-shot super-resolution with a physically-motivated downsampling kernel for endomicroscopy

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    Super-resolution (SR) methods have seen significant advances thanks to the development of convolutional neural networks (CNNs). CNNs have been successfully employed to improve the quality of endomicroscopy imaging. Yet, the inherent limitation of research on SR in endomicroscopy remains the lack of ground truth high-resolution (HR) images, commonly used for both supervised training and reference-based image quality assessment (IQA). Therefore, alternative methods, such as unsupervised SR are being explored. To address the need for non-reference image quality improvement, we designed a novel zero-shot super-resolution (ZSSR) approach that relies only on the endomicroscopy data to be processed in a self-supervised manner without the need for ground-truth HR images. We tailored the proposed pipeline to the idiosyncrasies of endomicroscopy by introducing both: a physically-motivated Voronoi downscaling kernel accounting for the endomicroscope’s irregular fibre-based sampling pattern, and realistic noise patterns. We also took advantage of video sequences to exploit a sequence of images for self-supervised zero-shot image quality improvement. We run ablation studies to assess our contribution in regards to the downscaling kernel and noise simulation. We validate our methodology on both synthetic and original data. Synthetic experiments were assessed with reference-based IQA, while our results for original images were evaluated in a user study conducted with both expert and non-expert observers. The results demonstrated superior performance in image quality of ZSSR reconstructions in comparison to the baseline method. The ZSSR is also competitive when compared to supervised single-image SR, especially being the preferred reconstruction technique by experts

    Learning from irregularly sampled data for endomicroscopy super-resolution: a comparative study of sparse and dense approaches

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    PURPOSE: Probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) enables performing an optical biopsy via a probe. pCLE probes consist of multiple optical fibres arranged in a bundle, which taken together generate signals in an irregularly sampled pattern. Current pCLE reconstruction is based on interpolating irregular signals onto an over-sampled Cartesian grid, using a naive linear interpolation. It was shown that convolutional neural networks (CNNs) could improve pCLE image quality. Yet classical CNNs may be suboptimal in regard to irregular data. METHODS: We compare pCLE reconstruction and super-resolution (SR) methods taking irregularly sampled or reconstructed pCLE images as input. We also propose to embed a Nadaraya-Watson (NW) kernel regression into the CNN framework as a novel trainable CNN layer. We design deep learning architectures allowing for reconstructing high-quality pCLE images directly from the irregularly sampled input data. We created synthetic sparse pCLE images to evaluate our methodology. RESULTS: The results were validated through an image quality assessment based on a combination of the following metrics: peak signal-to-noise ratio and the structural similarity index. Our analysis indicates that both dense and sparse CNNs outperform the reconstruction method currently used in the clinic. CONCLUSION: The main contributions of our study are a comparison of sparse and dense approach in pCLE image reconstruction. We also implement trainable generalised NW kernel regression as a novel sparse approach. We also generated synthetic data for training pCLE SR

    Adversarial training with cycle consistency for unsupervised super-resolution in endomicroscopy

    Get PDF
    In recent years, endomicroscopy has become increasingly used for diagnostic purposes and interventional guidance. It can provide intraoperative aids for real-time tissue characterization and can help to perform visual investigations aimed for example to discover epithelial cancers. Due to physical constraints on the acquisition process, endomicroscopy images, still today have a low number of informative pixels which hampers their quality. Post-processing techniques, such as Super-Resolution (SR), are a potential solution to increase the quality of these images. SR techniques are often supervised, requiring aligned pairs of low-resolution (LR) and high-resolution (HR) images patches to train a model. However, in our domain, the lack of HR images hinders the collection of such pairs and makes supervised training unsuitable. For this reason, we propose an unsupervised SR framework based on an adversarial deep neural network with a physically-inspired cycle consistency, designed to impose some acquisition properties on the super-resolved images. Our framework can exploit HR images, regardless of the domain where they are coming from, to transfer the quality of the HR images to the initial LR images. This property can be particularly useful in all situations where pairs of LR/HR are not available during the training. Our quantitative analysis, validated using a database of 238 endomicroscopy video sequences from 143 patients, shows the ability of the pipeline to produce convincing super-resolved images. A Mean Opinion Score (MOS) study also confirms this quantitative image quality assessment
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