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Incorporating prior knowledge via volumetric deep residual network to optimize the reconstruction of sparsely sampled MRI
Institution:1. Radiation Oncology Department, Stanford University, Stanford 94305, CA, USA;2. Radiology Department, University of California San Diego, La Jolla 92093, CA, USA;3. Radiology Department, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco 94107, CA, USA;1. National Laboratory of Pattern Recognition, Institute of Automation (CAS), Beijing 100190, China;2. Institute of Computing Technology (CAS), Beijing 100190, China;3. School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China;4. National Engineering Laboratory for Brain-inspired Intelligence Technology an Application, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China;5. Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78249-1604, USA;6. University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;1. School of Mathemtics and Computer Science, Gannan Normal University, China;2. Department of Mathematics, School of Science, Hangzhou Dianzi University, Hangzhou, China
Abstract:For sparse sampling that accelerates magnetic resonance (MR) image acquisition, non-linear reconstruction algorithms have been developed, which incorporated patient specific a prior information. More generic a prior information could be acquired via deep learning and utilized for image reconstruction. In this study, we developed a volumetric hierarchical deep residual convolutional neural network, referred to as T-Net, to provide a data-driven end-to-end mapping from sparsely sampled MR images to fully sampled MR images, where cartilage MR images were acquired using an Ultra-short TE sequence and retrospectively undersampled using pseudo-random Cartesian and radial acquisition schemes. The network had a hierarchical architecture that promoted the sparsity of feature maps and increased the receptive field, which were valuable for signal synthesis and artifact suppression. Relatively dense local connections and global shortcuts were established to facilitate residual learning and compensate for details lost in hierarchical processing. Additionally, volumetric processing was adopted to fully exploit spatial continuity in three-dimensional space. Data consistency was further enforced. The network was trained with 336 three-dimensional images (each consisting of 32 slices) and tested by 24 images. The incorporation of a priori information acquired via deep learning facilitated high acceleration factors (as high as 8) while maintaining high image fidelity (quantitatively evaluated using the structural similarity index measurement). The proposed T-Net had an improved performance as compared to several state-of-the-art networks.
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