22 research outputs found
Joint multi-field T1 quantification for fast field-cycling MRI
Acknowledgment This article is based upon work from COST Action CA15209, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology). Oliver Maier is a Recipient of a DOC Fellowship (24966) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences at the Institute of Medical Engineering at TU Graz. The authors would like to acknowledge the NVIDIA Corporation Hardware grant support.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Deep learning within a priori temporal feature spaces for large-scale dynamic MR image reconstruction: Application to 5-D cardiac MR Multitasking.
High spatiotemporal resolution dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a powerful clinical tool for imaging moving structures as well as to reveal and quantify other physical and physiological dynamics. The low speed of MRI necessitates acceleration methods such as deep learning reconstruction from under-sampled data. However, the massive size of many dynamic MRI problems prevents deep learning networks from directly exploiting global temporal relationships. In this work, we show that by applying deep neural networks inside a priori calculated temporal feature spaces, we enable deep learning reconstruction with global temporal modeling even for image sequences with >40,000 frames. One proposed variation of our approach using dilated multi-level Densely Connected Network (mDCN) speeds up feature space coordinate calculation by 3000x compared to conventional iterative methods, from 20 minutes to 0.39 seconds. Thus, the combination of low-rank tensor and deep learning models not only makes large-scale dynamic MRI feasible but also practical for routine clinical application
k-t NEXT:dynamic MR image reconstruction exploiting spatio-temporal correlations
Dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exhibits high correlations in
k-space and time. In order to accelerate the dynamic MR imaging and to exploit
k-t correlations from highly undersampled data, here we propose a novel deep
learning based approach for dynamic MR image reconstruction, termed k-t NEXT
(k-t NEtwork with X-f Transform). In particular, inspired by traditional
methods such as k-t BLAST and k-t FOCUSS, we propose to reconstruct the true
signals from aliased signals in x-f domain to exploit the spatio-temporal
redundancies. Building on that, the proposed method then learns to recover the
signals by alternating the reconstruction process between the x-f space and
image space in an iterative fashion. This enables the network to effectively
capture useful information and jointly exploit spatio-temporal correlations
from both complementary domains. Experiments conducted on highly undersampled
short-axis cardiac cine MRI scans demonstrate that our proposed method
outperforms the current state-of-the-art dynamic MR reconstruction approaches
both quantitatively and qualitatively.Comment: This paper is accepted by MICCAI 201