ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Purpose: This study demonstrated an MR signal multitask learning method for 3D simultaneous segmentation and relaxometry of human brain tissues. Materials and Methods: A 3D inversion-prepared balanced steady-state free precession sequence was used for acquiring in vivo multi-contrast brain images. The deep neural network contained 3 residual blocks, and each block had 8 fully connected layers with sigmoid activation, layer norm, and 256 neurons in each layer. Online synthesized MR signal evolutions and labels were used to train the neural network batch-by-batch. Empirically defined ranges of T1 and T2 values for the normal gray matter, white matter and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were used as the prior knowledge. MRI brain experiments were performed on 3 healthy volunteers as well as animal (N=6) and prostate patient (N=1) experiments. Results: In animal validation experiment, the differences/errors (mean difference $pm$ standard deviation of difference) between the T1 and T2 values estimated from the proposed method and the ground truth were 113 $pm$ 486 and 154 $pm$ 512 ms for T1, and 5 $pm$ 33 and 7 $pm$ 41 ms for T2, respectively. In healthy volunteer experiments (N=3), whole brain segmentation and relaxometry were finished within ~5 seconds. The estimated apparent T1 and T2 maps were in accordance with known brain anatomy, and not affected by coil sensitivity variation. Gray matter, white matter, and CSF were successfully segmented. The deep neural network can also generate synthetic T1 and T2 weighted images. Conclusion: The proposed multitask learning method can directly generate brain apparent T1 and T2 maps, as well as synthetic T1 and T2 weighted images, in conjunction with segmentation of gray matter, white matter and CSF.
This study presents a comparison of quantitative MRI methods based on an efficiency metric that quantifies their intrinsic ability to extract information about tissue parameters. Under a regime of unbiased parameter estimates, an intrinsic efficiency
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of hard biological tissues is challenging due to the fleeting lifetime and low strength of their response to resonant stimuli, especially at low magnetic fields. Consequently, the impact of MRI on some medical applica
Multi-contrast images are commonly acquired together to maximize complementary diagnostic information, albeit at the expense of longer scan times. A time-efficient strategy to acquire high-quality multi-contrast images is to accelerate individual seq
As bone and air produce weak signals with conventional MR sequences, segmentation of these tissues particularly difficult in MRI. We propose to integrate patch-based anatomical signatures and an auto-context model into a machine learning framework to
A major remaining challenge for magnetic resonance-based attenuation correction methods (MRAC) is their susceptibility to sources of MRI artifacts (e.g. implants, motion) and uncertainties due to the limitations of MRI contrast (e.g. accurate bone de