3,766 research outputs found
Spatio-temporal wavelet regularization for parallel MRI reconstruction: application to functional MRI
Parallel MRI is a fast imaging technique that enables the acquisition of
highly resolved images in space or/and in time. The performance of parallel
imaging strongly depends on the reconstruction algorithm, which can proceed
either in the original k-space (GRAPPA, SMASH) or in the image domain
(SENSE-like methods). To improve the performance of the widely used SENSE
algorithm, 2D- or slice-specific regularization in the wavelet domain has been
deeply investigated. In this paper, we extend this approach using 3D-wavelet
representations in order to handle all slices together and address
reconstruction artifacts which propagate across adjacent slices. The gain
induced by such extension (3D-Unconstrained Wavelet Regularized -SENSE:
3D-UWR-SENSE) is validated on anatomical image reconstruction where no temporal
acquisition is considered. Another important extension accounts for temporal
correlations that exist between successive scans in functional MRI (fMRI). In
addition to the case of 2D+t acquisition schemes addressed by some other
methods like kt-FOCUSS, our approach allows us to deal with 3D+t acquisition
schemes which are widely used in neuroimaging. The resulting 3D-UWR-SENSE and
4D-UWR-SENSE reconstruction schemes are fully unsupervised in the sense that
all regularization parameters are estimated in the maximum likelihood sense on
a reference scan. The gain induced by such extensions is illustrated on both
anatomical and functional image reconstruction, and also measured in terms of
statistical sensitivity for the 4D-UWR-SENSE approach during a fast
event-related fMRI protocol. Our 4D-UWR-SENSE algorithm outperforms the SENSE
reconstruction at the subject and group levels (15 subjects) for different
contrasts of interest (eg, motor or computation tasks) and using different
parallel acceleration factors (R=2 and R=4) on 2x2x3mm3 EPI images.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1103.353
Modulated Unit-Norm Tight Frames for Compressed Sensing
In this paper, we propose a compressed sensing (CS) framework that consists
of three parts: a unit-norm tight frame (UTF), a random diagonal matrix and a
column-wise orthonormal matrix. We prove that this structure satisfies the
restricted isometry property (RIP) with high probability if the number of
measurements for -sparse signals of length
and if the column-wise orthonormal matrix is bounded. Some existing structured
sensing models can be studied under this framework, which then gives tighter
bounds on the required number of measurements to satisfy the RIP. More
importantly, we propose several structured sensing models by appealing to this
unified framework, such as a general sensing model with arbitrary/determinisic
subsamplers, a fast and efficient block compressed sensing scheme, and
structured sensing matrices with deterministic phase modulations, all of which
can lead to improvements on practical applications. In particular, one of the
constructions is applied to simplify the transceiver design of CS-based channel
estimation for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) systems.Comment: submitted to IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Multiband Spectrum Access: Great Promises for Future Cognitive Radio Networks
Cognitive radio has been widely considered as one of the prominent solutions
to tackle the spectrum scarcity. While the majority of existing research has
focused on single-band cognitive radio, multiband cognitive radio represents
great promises towards implementing efficient cognitive networks compared to
single-based networks. Multiband cognitive radio networks (MB-CRNs) are
expected to significantly enhance the network's throughput and provide better
channel maintenance by reducing handoff frequency. Nevertheless, the wideband
front-end and the multiband spectrum access impose a number of challenges yet
to overcome. This paper provides an in-depth analysis on the recent
advancements in multiband spectrum sensing techniques, their limitations, and
possible future directions to improve them. We study cooperative communications
for MB-CRNs to tackle a fundamental limit on diversity and sampling. We also
investigate several limits and tradeoffs of various design parameters for
MB-CRNs. In addition, we explore the key MB-CRNs performance metrics that
differ from the conventional metrics used for single-band based networks.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures; published in the Proceedings of the IEEE
Journal, Special Issue on Future Radio Spectrum Access, March 201
Biorthogonal partners and applications
Two digital filters H(z) and F(z) are said to be biorthogonal partners of each other if their cascade H(z)F(z) satisfies the Nyquist or zero-crossing property. Biorthogonal partners arise in many different contexts such as filterbank theory, exact and least squares digital interpolation, and multiresolution theory. They also play a central role in the theory of equalization, especially, fractionally spaced equalizers in digital communications. We first develop several theoretical properties of biorthogonal partners. We also develop conditions for the existence of biorthogonal partners and FIR biorthogonal pairs and establish the connections to the Riesz basis property. We then explain how these results play a role in many of the above-mentioned applications
Map online system using internet-based image catalogue
Digital maps carry along its geodata information such as coordinate that is important in one particular topographic and thematic map. These geodatas are meaningful especially in military field. Since the maps carry along this information, its makes the size of the images is too big. The bigger size, the bigger storage is required to allocate the image file. It also can cause longer loading time. These conditions make it did not suitable to be applied in image catalogue approach via internet environment. With compression techniques, the image size can be reduced and the quality of the image is still guaranteed without much changes. This report is paying attention to one of the image compression technique using wavelet technology. Wavelet technology is much batter than any other image compression technique nowadays. As a result, the compressed images applied to a system called Map Online that used Internet-based Image Catalogue approach. This system allowed user to buy map online. User also can download the maps that had been bought besides using the searching the map. Map searching is based on several meaningful keywords. As a result, this system is expected to be used by Jabatan Ukur dan Pemetaan Malaysia (JUPEM) in order to make the organization vision is implemented
Applications of wavelet-based compression to multidimensional Earth science data
A data compression algorithm involving vector quantization (VQ) and the discrete wavelet transform (DWT) is applied to two different types of multidimensional digital earth-science data. The algorithms (WVQ) is optimized for each particular application through an optimization procedure that assigns VQ parameters to the wavelet transform subbands subject to constraints on compression ratio and encoding complexity. Preliminary results of compressing global ocean model data generated on a Thinking Machines CM-200 supercomputer are presented. The WVQ scheme is used in both a predictive and nonpredictive mode. Parameters generated by the optimization algorithm are reported, as are signal-to-noise (SNR) measurements of actual quantized data. The problem of extrapolating hydrodynamic variables across the continental landmasses in order to compute the DWT on a rectangular grid is discussed. Results are also presented for compressing Landsat TM 7-band data using the WVQ scheme. The formulation of the optimization problem is presented along with SNR measurements of actual quantized data. Postprocessing applications are considered in which the seven spectral bands are clustered into 256 clusters using a k-means algorithm and analyzed using the Los Alamos multispectral data analysis program, SPECTRUM, both before and after being compressed using the WVQ program
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