19 research outputs found
COVID-19 Detection from Respiratory Sounds with Hierarchical Spectrogram Transformers
Monitoring of prevalent airborne diseases such as COVID-19 characteristically
involves respiratory assessments. While auscultation is a mainstream method for
preliminary screening of disease symptoms, its utility is hampered by the need
for dedicated hospital visits. Remote monitoring based on recordings of
respiratory sounds on portable devices is a promising alternative, which can
assist in early assessment of COVID-19 that primarily affects the lower
respiratory tract. In this study, we introduce a novel deep learning approach
to distinguish patients with COVID-19 from healthy controls given audio
recordings of cough or breathing sounds. The proposed approach leverages a
novel hierarchical spectrogram transformer (HST) on spectrogram representations
of respiratory sounds. HST embodies self-attention mechanisms over local
windows in spectrograms, and window size is progressively grown over model
stages to capture local to global context. HST is compared against
state-of-the-art conventional and deep-learning baselines. Demonstrations on
crowd-sourced multi-national datasets indicate that HST outperforms competing
methods, achieving over 83% area under the receiver operating characteristic
curve (AUC) in detecting COVID-19 cases
Projection onto Epigraph Sets for Rapid Self-Tuning Compressed Sensing MRI
The compressed sensing (CS) framework leverages the sparsity of MR images to reconstruct from undersampled acquisitions. CS reconstructions involve one or more regularization parameters that weigh sparsity in transform domains against fidelity to acquired data. While parameter selection is critical for reconstruction quality, the optimal parameters are subject and dataset specific. Thus, commonly practiced heuristic parameter selection generalizes poorly to independent datasets. Recent studies have proposed to tune parameters by estimating the risk of removing significant image coefficients. Line searches are performed across the parameter space to identify the parameter value that minimizes this risk. Although effective, these line searches yield prolonged reconstruction times. Here, we propose a new self-tuning CS method that uses computationally efficient projections onto epigraph sets of the ℓ1 and total-variation norms to simultaneously achieve parameter selection and regularization. In vivo demonstrations are provided for balanced steady-state free precession, time-of-flight, and T1-weighted imaging. The proposed method achieves an order of magnitude improvement in computational efficiency over line-search methods while maintaining near-optimal parameter selection.IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
IEEE Signal Processing Society
IEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Society
IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Societ
Statistically segregated k-space sampling for accelerating multiple-acquisition MRI
A central limitation of multiple-acquisition magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the degradation in scan efficiency as the number of distinct datasets grows. Sparse recovery techniques can alleviate this limitation via randomly undersampled acquisitions. A frequent sampling strategy is to prescribe for each acquisition a different random pattern drawn from a common sampling density. However, naive random patterns often contain gaps or clusters across the acquisition dimension that in turn can degrade reconstruction quality or reduce scan efficiency. To address this problem, a statistically-segregated sampling method is proposed for multiple-acquisition MRI. This method generates multiple patterns sequentially, while adaptively modifying the sampling density to minimize k-space overlap across patterns. As a result, it improves incoherence across acquisitions while still maintaining similar sampling density across the radial dimension of k-space. Comprehensive simulations and in vivo results are presented for phase-cycled balanced steady-state free precession and multi-echo T2-weighted imaging. Segregated sampling achieves significantly improved quality in both Fourier and compressedsensing reconstructions of multiple-acquisition datasets