6 research outputs found

    (k,q)-Compressed Sensing for dMRI with Joint Spatial-Angular Sparsity Prior

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    Advanced diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) techniques, like diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) and high angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI), remain underutilized compared to diffusion tensor imaging because the scan times needed to produce accurate estimations of fiber orientation are significantly longer. To accelerate DSI and HARDI, recent methods from compressed sensing (CS) exploit a sparse underlying representation of the data in the spatial and angular domains to undersample in the respective k- and q-spaces. State-of-the-art frameworks, however, impose sparsity in the spatial and angular domains separately and involve the sum of the corresponding sparse regularizers. In contrast, we propose a unified (k,q)-CS formulation which imposes sparsity jointly in the spatial-angular domain to further increase sparsity of dMRI signals and reduce the required subsampling rate. To efficiently solve this large-scale global reconstruction problem, we introduce a novel adaptation of the FISTA algorithm that exploits dictionary separability. We show on phantom and real HARDI data that our approach achieves significantly more accurate signal reconstructions than the state of the art while sampling only 2-4% of the (k,q)-space, allowing for the potential of new levels of dMRI acceleration.Comment: To be published in the 2017 Computational Diffusion MRI Workshop of MICCA

    Fast Fiber Orientation Estimation in Diffusion MRI from kq-Space Sampling and Anatomical Priors

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    High spatio-angular resolution diffusion MRI (dMRI) has been shown to provide accurate identification of complex fiber configurations, albeit at the cost of long acquisition times. We propose a method to recover intra-voxel fiber configurations at high spatio-angular resolution relying on a kq-space under-sampling scheme to enable accelerated acquisitions. The inverse problem for reconstruction of the fiber orientation distribution (FOD) is regularized by a structured sparsity prior promoting simultaneously voxelwise sparsity and spatial smoothness of fiber orientation. Prior knowledge of the spatial distribution of white matter, gray matter and cerebrospinal fluid is also assumed. A minimization problem is formulated and solved via a forward-backward convex optimization algorithmic structure. Simulations and real data analysis suggest that accurate FOD mapping can be achieved from severe kq-space under-sampling regimes, potentially enabling high spatio-angular dMRI in the clinical setting.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Supplementary Material

    Improved Quantification of Connectivity in Human Brain Mapping

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    Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) is an advanced MRI methodology that can be used to probe the microstructure of biological tissue. dMRI can provide orientation information by modeling the process of water diffusion in white matter. This thesis presents contributions in three areas of diffusion imaging technology: diffusion reconstruction, quantification, and validation of derived metrics. It presents a novel reconstruction method by combining generalized q-sampling imaging, spherical harmonic basis functions and constrained spherical deconvolution methods to estimate the fiber orientation distribution function (ODF). This method provides improved spatial localization of brain nuclei and fiber tract separation. A novel diffusion anisotropy metric is presented that provides anatomically interpretable measurements of tracts that are robust in crossing areas of the brain. The metric, directional Axonal Volume (dAV) provides an estimate of directional water content of the tract based on the (ODF) and proton density map. dAV is a directionally sensitive metric and can separate anisotropic water content for each fiber population, providing a quantification in milliliters of water. A method is provided to map voxel-based dAV onto tracts that is not confounded by crossing areas and follows the tract morphology. This work introduces a novel textile based hollow fiber anisotropic phantom (TABIP) for validation of reconstruction and quantification methods. This provides a ground truth reference for axonal scale water tubular structures arranged in various anatomical configurations, crossing and mixing patterns. Analysis shows that: 1) the textile tracts are identifiable with scans used in human imaging and produced tracts and voxel metrics in the range of human tissue; 2) the current methods could resolve crossing at 90o and 45o but not 30o; 3) dAV/NODDI model closely matches (r=0.95) the number of fibers whereas conventional metrics poorly match (i.e., FA r=0.32). This work represents a new accurate quantification of axonal water content through diffusion imaging. dAV shows promise as a new anatomically interpretable metric of axonal connectivity that is not confounded by factors such as axon dispersion, crossing and local isotropic water content. This will provide better anatomical mapping of white matter and potentially improve the detection of axonal tract pathology

    Joint Spatial-Angular Sparse Coding, Compressed Sensing, and Dictionary Learning for Diffusion MRI

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    Neuroimaging provides a window into the inner workings of the human brain to diagnose and prevent neurological diseases and understand biological brain function, anatomy, and psychology. Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) is an emerging medical imaging modality used to study the anatomical network of neurons in the brain, which form cohesive bundles, or fiber tracts, that connect various parts of the brain. Since about 73% of the brain is water, measuring the flow, or diffusion of water molecules in the presence of fiber bundles, allows researchers to estimate the orientation of fiber tracts and reconstruct the internal wiring of the brain, in vivo. Diffusion MRI signals can be modeled within two domains: the spatial domain consisting of voxels in a brain volume and the diffusion or angular domain, where fiber orientation is estimated in each voxel. Researchers aim to estimate the probability distribution of fiber orientation in every voxel of a brain volume in order to trace paths of fiber tracts from voxel to voxel over the entire brain. Therefore, the traditional framework for dMRI processing and analysis has been from a voxel-wise vantage point with added spatial regularization considered post-hoc. In contrast, we propose a new joint spatial-angular representation of dMRI data which pairs signals in each voxel with the global spatial environment, jointly. This has the ability to improve many aspects of dMRI processing and analysis and re-envision the core representation of dMRI data from a local perspective to a global one. In this thesis, we propose three main contributions which take advantage of such joint spatial-angular representations to improve major machine learning tasks applied to dMRI: sparse coding, compressed sensing, and dictionary learning. First, we will show that we can achieve sparser representations of dMRI by utilizing a global spatial-angular dictionary instead of a purely voxel-wise angular dictionary. As dMRI data is very large in size, we provide a number of novel extensions to popular spare coding algorithms that perform efficient optimization on a global-scale by exploiting the separability of our dictionaries over the spatial and angular domains. Next, compressed sensing is used to accelerate signal acquisition based on an underlying sparse representation of the data. We will show that our proposed representation has the potential to push the limits of the current state of scanner acceleration within a new compressed sensing model for dMRI. Finally, sparsity can be further increased by learning dictionaries directly from datasets of interest. Prior dictionary learning for dMRI learn angular dictionaries alone. Our third contribution is to learn spatial-angular dictionaries jointly from dMRI data directly to better represent the global structure. Traditionally, the problem of dictionary learning is non-convex with no guarantees of finding a globally optimal solution. We derive the first theoretical results of global optimality for this class of dictionary learning problems. We hope the core foundation of a joint spatial-angular representation will open a new perspective on dMRI with respect to many other processing tasks and analyses. In addition, our contributions are applicable to any general signal types that can benefit from separable dictionaries. We hope the contributions in this thesis may be adopted in the larger signal processing, computer vision, and machine learning communities. dMRI signals can be modeled within two domains: the spatial domain consisting of voxels in a brain volume and the diffusion or angular domain, where fiber orientation is estimated in each voxel. Computationally speaking, researchers aim to estimate the probability distribution of fiber orientation in every voxel of a brain volume in order to trace paths of fiber tracts from voxel to voxel over the entire brain. Therefore, the traditional framework for dMRI processing and analysis is from a voxel-wise, or angular, vantage point with post-hoc consideration of their local spatial neighborhoods. In contrast, we propose a new global spatial-angular representation of dMRI data which pairs signals in each voxel with the global spatial environment, jointly, to improve many aspects of dMRI processing and analysis, including the important need for accelerating the otherwise time-consuming acquisition of advanced dMRI protocols. In this thesis, we propose three main contributions which utilize our joint spatial-angular representation to improve major machine learning tasks applied to dMRI: sparse coding, compressed sensing, and dictionary learning. We will show that sparser codes are possible by utilizing a global dictionary instead of a voxel-wise angular dictionary. This allows for a reduction of the number of measurements needed to reconstruct a dMRI signal to increase acceleration using compressed sensing. Finally, instead of learning angular dictionaries alone, we learn spatial-angular dictionaries jointly from dMRI data directly to better represent the global structure. In addition, this problem is non-convex and so we derive the first theories to guarantee convergence to a global minimum. As dMRI data is very large in size, we provide a number of novel extensions to popular algorithms that perform efficient optimization on a global-scale by exploiting the separability of our global dictionaries over the spatial and angular domains. We hope the core foundation of a joint spatial-angular representation will open a new perspective on dMRI with respect to many other processing tasks and analyses. In addition, our contributions are applicable to any separable dictionary setting which we hope may be adopted in the larger image processing, computer vision, and machine learning communities
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