BackgroundMetal objects implanted in the bodies of patients usually generate severe streaking artifacts in reconstructed images of X-ray computed tomography, which degrade the image quality and affect the diagnosis of disease. Therefore, it is essential to reduce these artifacts to meet the clinical demands.MethodsIn this work, we propose a Gaussian diffusion sinogram inpainting metal artifact reduction algorithm based on prior images to reduce these artifacts for fan-beam computed tomography reconstruction. In this algorithm, prior information that originated from a tissue-classified prior image is used for the inpainting of metal-corrupted projections, and it is incorporated into a Gaussian diffusion function. The prior knowledge is particularly designed to locate the diffusion position and improve the sparsity of the subtraction sinogram, which is obtained by subtracting the prior sinogram of the metal regions from the original sinogram. The sinogram inpainting algorithm is implemented through an approach of diffusing prior energy and is then solved by gradient descent. The performance of the proposed metal artifact reduction algorithm is compared with two conventional metal artifact reduction algorithms, namely the interpolation metal artifact reduction algorithm and normalized metal artifact reduction algorithm. The experimental datasets used included both simulated and clinical datasets.ResultsBy evaluating the results subjectively, the proposed metal artifact reduction algorithm causes fewer secondary artifacts than the two conventional metal artifact reduction algorithms, which lead to severe secondary artifacts resulting from impertinent interpolation and normalization. Additionally, the objective evaluation shows the proposed approach has the smallest normalized mean absolute deviation and the highest signal-to-noise ratio, indicating that the proposed method has produced the image with the best quality.ConclusionsNo matter for the simulated datasets or the clinical datasets, the proposed algorithm has reduced the metal artifacts apparently.
Failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) is a prospective risk assessment tool used to identify, assess, and eliminate potential failure modes (FMs) in various industries to improve security and reliability. However, the traditional FMEA method has been criticized for several shortcomings and even the improved FMEA methods based on predefined linguistic terms cannot meet the needs of FMEA team members' diversified opinion expressions. To solve these problems, a novel FMEA method is proposed by integrating Bayesian fuzzy assessment number (BFAN) and extended gray relational analysis-technique for order preference by similarity to ideal solution (GRA-TOPSIS) method.First, the BFANs are used to flexibly describe the risk evaluation results of the identified failure modes. Second, the Hausdorff distance between BFANs is calculated by using the probability density function (PDF). Finally, on the basis of the distance, the extended GRA-TOPSIS method is applied to prioritize failure modes. A simulation study is presented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed approach in dealing with vague concepts and show its advantages over existing FMEA methods. Furthermore, a real case concerning the risk evaluation of aero-engine turbine and compressor blades is provided to illustrate the practical application of the proposed method and particularly show the potential of using the BFANs in capturing FMEA team members' diverse opinions. KEYWORDSBayesian fuzzy assessment number, failure mode and effects analysis, GRA-TOPSIS, Hausdorff distance, probability density function
Background: In recent years, low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) has played an important role in the diagnosis CT to reduce the potential adverse effects of X-ray radiation on patients, while maintaining the same diagnostic image quality. Purpose: Deep learning (DL)-based methods have played an increasingly important role in the field of LDCT imaging. However, its performance is highly dependent on the consistency of feature distributions between training data and test data. Due to patient's breathing movements during data acquisition, the paired LDCT and normal dose CT images are difficult to obtain from realistic imaging scenarios. Moreover, LDCT images from simulation or clinical CT examination often have different feature distributions due to the pollution by different amounts and types of image noises. If a network model trained with a simulated dataset is used to directly test clinical patients' LDCT data, its denoising performance may be degraded. Based on this, we propose a novel domain-adaptive denoising network (DADN) via noise estimation and transfer learning to resolve the out-of -distribution problem in LDCT imaging. Methods: To overcome the previous adaptation issue, a novel network model consisting of a reconstruction network and a noise estimation network was designed. The noise estimation network based on a double branch structure is used for image noise extraction and adaptation. Meanwhile, the U-Net-based reconstruction network uses several spatially adaptive normalization modules to fuse multi-scale noise input. Moreover, to facilitate the adaptation of the proposed DADN network to new imaging scenarios, we set a two-stage network training plan. In the first stage, the public simulated dataset is used for training. In the second transfer training stage, we will continue to fine-tune the network model with a torso phantom dataset, while some parameters are frozen. The main reason using the two-stage training scheme is based on the fact that the feature distribution of image content from the public dataset is complex and diverse,whereas the feature distribution of noise pattern from the torso phantom dataset is closer to realistic imaging scenarios. Results: In an evaluation study, the trained DADN model is applied to both the public and clinical patient LDCT datasets. Through the comparison of visual inspection and quantitative results, it is shown that the proposed DADN network model can perform well in terms of noise and artifact suppression, while effectively preserving image contrast and details. Conclusions: In this paper, we have proposed a new DL network to overcome the domain adaptation problem in LDCT image denoising. Moreover, the results demonstrate the feasibility and effectiveness of the application of our proposed DADN network model as a new DL-based LDCT image denoising method.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.