10,118 research outputs found

    Quadratic Regularization Design for 2-D CT

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    Statistical methods for tomographic image reconstruction have improved noise and spatial resolution properties that may improve image quality in X-ray computed tomography (CT). Penalized weighted least squares (PWLS) methods using conventional quadratic regularization lead to nonuniform and anisotropic spatial resolution due to interactions between the weighting, which is necessary for good noise properties, and the regularizer. Previously, we addressed this problem for parallel-beam emission tomography using matrix algebra methods to design data-dependent, shift-variant regularizers that improve resolution uniformity. This paper develops a fast angular integral mostly analytical (AIMA) regularization design method for 2-D fan-beam X-ray CT imaging, for which parallel-beam tomography is a special case. Simulation results demonstrate that the new method for regularization design requires very modest computation and leads to nearly uniform and isotropic spatial resolution in transmission tomography when using quadratic regularization.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/85858/1/Fessler18.pd

    Fast Predictions of Variance Images for Fan-Beam Transmission Tomography With Quadratic Regularization

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    Accurate predictions of image variances can be useful for reconstruction algorithm analysis and for the design of regularization methods. Computing the predicted variance at every pixel using matrix-based approximations is impractical. Even most recently adopted methods that are based on local discrete Fourier approximations are impractical since they would require a forward and backprojection and two fast Fourier transform (FFT) calculations for every pixel, particularly for shift-variant systems like fan-beam tomography. This paper describes new "analytical" approaches to predicting the approximate variance maps of 2-D images that are reconstructed by penalized-likelihood estimation with quadratic regularization in fan-beam geometries. The simplest of the proposed analytical approaches requires computation equivalent to one backprojection and some summations, so it is computationally practical even for the data sizes in X-ray computed tomography (CT). Simulation results show that it gives accurate predictions of the variance maps. The parallel-beam geometry is a simple special case of the fan-beam analysis. The analysis is also applicable to 2-D positron emission tomography (PET).Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/86007/1/Fessler37.pd

    A self-calibration approach for optical long baseline interferometry imaging

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    Current optical interferometers are affected by unknown turbulent phases on each telescope. In the field of radio-interferometry, the self-calibration technique is a powerful tool to process interferometric data with missing phase information. This paper intends to revisit the application of self-calibration to Optical Long Baseline Interferometry (OLBI). We cast rigorously the OLBI data processing problem into the self-calibration framework and demonstrate the efficiency of the method on real astronomical OLBI dataset
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