34 research outputs found

    Susceptibility-movement interaction.

    No full text
    <p>A. The x- and y- rotation parameters used for the simulation of the first 36 volumes (z-rotations not shown because they do not contribute to the dynamic susceptibility effect, translations were all 0). The coloured vertical lines highlight the motion of the volumes depicted in plot B. B. Top two rows show the errors in displacement field caused by the dynamic portion of the susceptibility artefact, for volumes 2-5 of the acquisition—the motion these volumes experienced is highlighted with colour in plot A. Bottom two rows show the error in intensity of these volumes after they are corrected for motion and the static portion of the susceptibility field, obtained by subtraction from ground truth images.</p

    Errors introduced when failing to account for the susceptibility-movement interaction.

    No full text
    <p>Absolute errors in FA shown over one slice, for datasets corrected for motion and static susceptibility. Data in the static columns were simulated with only motion and static susceptibility artefacts, whilst the dynamic data contained motion and dynamic susceptibility. ‘One PE correction’ indicates only the AP data was used for correction, and ‘two PE correction’ indicates the AP and PA data were both use—note these are different from MPB and MPB/F, which are methods for both estimating and applying a displacement field, whilst in this case known ground-truth displacement fields have been applied.</p

    Errors in FA metrics.

    No full text
    <p>FA maps estimated from corrected and ground truth images, along with error maps obtained by subtraction from the noise-free ground truth estimate. FA map shown for SNR infinite case. Red arrows show regions of high error caused by signal pileup that could not be corrected by the RB and MPB methods, despite estimation of the correct displacement field. The MPB/F method is able to reduce errors in these regions. Note the MPB/F method uses twice as much data as the other methods, increasing its effective SNR.</p

    AP-LR comparison on real data.

    No full text
    <p>Figure shows corrected AP and LR b = 0 images, and the intensity difference between them.</p

    Error distribution.

    No full text
    <p>Histogram of the difference in absolute FA errors over the full brain, for datasets corrected for motion and static susceptibility: |ΔFA<sub>static</sub>| − |ΔFA<sub>dynamic</sub>|, so the heavy tail for negative values indicate higher errors for the dynamic case.</p

    Errors in diffusion metrics (FA, MD and the principle diffusion direction V1), averaged across the brain.

    No full text
    <p>Values shown are the mean across the five noise realisations. V1 errors were only calculated in voxels with a ground-truth FA >0.2. Errors (calculated as the standard deviation of the mean value for each noise realisation) not shown as they were all 0 to 3 decimal places.</p

    AP-LR comparison on simulated data.

    No full text
    <p>Figure shows corrected AP and LR b = 0 images, and the intensity difference between them. SNR = 40 dataset shown.</p

    Displacement field errors.

    No full text
    <p>Error in displacement fields estimated by the three methods, assessed by subtraction from the ground truth field. One axial slice shown.</p

    Mean of absolute errors in displacement field across the brain.

    No full text
    <p>Values shown are the mean across the five noise realisations, and errors are the standard deviation of the mean value for each noise realisation. Note that the multiple phase-encode results cover both MPB and MPB/F methods.</p
    corecore