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BackgroundCardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging has become a modality with superior power for the diagnosis and prognosis of cardiovascular diseases. One of the essential quality controls of CMR images is to investigate the complete cardiac coverage, which is necessary for the volumetric and functional assessment.PurposeThis study examines the full cardiac coverage using a 3D dual‐domain convolutional model and then improves this model using an innovative explainable salient region detection model and a recurrent architecture.MethodsSalient regions are extracted from the short‐axis cine CMR stacks using a three‐step proposed algorithm. Changing the architecture of the 3D dual‐domain convolutional model to a recurrent one and taking advantage of the salient region detection model creates a kind of attention mechanism that leads to improved results.ResultsThe results obtained from the images of over 6200 participants of the UK Biobank population cohort study show the superiority of the proposed model over the previous studies. The dataset is the largest regarding the number of participants to control the cardiac coverage. The accuracies of the proposed model in identifying the presence/absence of basal/apical slices are 96.22% and 95.42%, respectively.ConclusionThe proposed recurrent architecture of the 3D dual‐domain convolutional model can force the model to focus on the most informative areas of the images using the extracted salient regions, which can help the model improve accuracy. The performance of the proposed fully automated model indicates that it can be used for image quality control in population cohort datasets and real‐time post‐imaging quality assessments. Codes are available at https://github.com/mohammadhashemii/CMR_Cardiac_Coverage_Control
BackgroundCardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging has become a modality with superior power for the diagnosis and prognosis of cardiovascular diseases. One of the essential quality controls of CMR images is to investigate the complete cardiac coverage, which is necessary for the volumetric and functional assessment.PurposeThis study examines the full cardiac coverage using a 3D dual‐domain convolutional model and then improves this model using an innovative explainable salient region detection model and a recurrent architecture.MethodsSalient regions are extracted from the short‐axis cine CMR stacks using a three‐step proposed algorithm. Changing the architecture of the 3D dual‐domain convolutional model to a recurrent one and taking advantage of the salient region detection model creates a kind of attention mechanism that leads to improved results.ResultsThe results obtained from the images of over 6200 participants of the UK Biobank population cohort study show the superiority of the proposed model over the previous studies. The dataset is the largest regarding the number of participants to control the cardiac coverage. The accuracies of the proposed model in identifying the presence/absence of basal/apical slices are 96.22% and 95.42%, respectively.ConclusionThe proposed recurrent architecture of the 3D dual‐domain convolutional model can force the model to focus on the most informative areas of the images using the extracted salient regions, which can help the model improve accuracy. The performance of the proposed fully automated model indicates that it can be used for image quality control in population cohort datasets and real‐time post‐imaging quality assessments. Codes are available at https://github.com/mohammadhashemii/CMR_Cardiac_Coverage_Control
This paper presents the use of noncontact ultrasound for the nondestructive detection of defects in two plastic plates made of polyamide (PA6) and polyethylene (PE). The aim of the study was to: (1) assess the presence of defects as well as their size, type, and orientation based on the amplitudes of Lamb ultrasonic waves measured in plates made of polyamide (PA6) and polyethylene (PE) due to their homogeneous internal structure, which mainly determined the selection of such model materials for testing; and (2) verify the possibilities of building automatic quality control and defect detection systems based on ML based on the results of the above-mentioned studies within the Industry 4.0/5.0 paradigm. Tests were conducted on plates with generated synthetic defects resembling defects found in real materials such as delamination and cracking at the edge of the plate and a crack (discontinuity) in the center of the plate. Defect sizes ranged from 1 mm to 15 mm. Probes at 30 kHz were used to excite Lamb waves in the slab material. This method is sensitive to the slightest changes in material integrity. A significant decrease in signal amplitude was observed, even for defects of a few millimeters in length. In addition to traditional methods, machine learning (ML) was used for the analysis, allowing an initial assessment of the method’s potential for building cyber-physical systems and digital twins. By training ML models on ultrasonic data, algorithms can distinguish subtle differences between signals reflected from normal and defective areas of the material. Defect types such as voids, cracks, or weak bonds often produce distinct acoustic signatures, which ML models can learn to recognize with high accuracy. Using techniques like feature extraction, ML can process these high-dimensional ultrasonic datasets, identifying patterns that human inspectors might overlook. Furthermore, ML models are adaptable, allowing the same trained algorithms to work on various material batches or panel types with minimal retraining. This combination of automation and precision significantly enhances the reliability and efficiency of quality control in industrial manufacturing settings. The achieved accuracy results, 0.9431 in classification and 0.9721 in prediction, are comparable to or better than the AI-based quality control results in other noninvasive methods of flat surface defect detection, and in the presented ultrasonic method, they are the first described in this way. This approach demonstrates the novelty and contribution of artificial intelligence (AI) methods and tools, significantly extending and automating existing applications of traditional methods. The susceptibility to augmentation by AI/ML may represent an important new property of traditional methods crucial to assessing their suitability for future Industry 4.0/5.0 applications.
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