4 results on '"Jacob, Mathews"'
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2. Blind Compressive Sensing Dynamic MRI.
- Author
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Lingala, Sajan Goud and Jacob, Mathews
- Subjects
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COMPRESSED sensing , *COEFFICIENTS (Statistics) , *IMAGE reconstruction , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *MACHINE learning , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging - Abstract
We propose a novel blind compressive sensing (BCS) frame work to recover dynamic magnetic resonance images from undersampled measurements. This scheme models the dynamic signal as a sparse linear combination of temporal basis functions, chosen from a large dictionary. In contrast to classical compressed sensing, the BCS scheme simultaneously estimates the dictionary and the sparse coefficients from the undersampled measurements. Apart from the sparsity of the coefficients, the key difference of the BCS scheme with current low rank methods is the nonorthogonal nature of the dictionary basis functions. Since the number of degrees-of-freedom of the BCS model is smaller than that of the low-rank methods, it provides improved reconstructions at high acceleration rates. We formulate the reconstruction as a constrained optimization problem; the objective function is the linear combination of a data consistency term and sparsity promoting \ell1 prior of the coefficients. The Frobenius norm dictionary constraint is used to avoid scale ambiguity. We introduce a simple and efficient majorize–minimize algorithm, which decouples the original criterion into three simpler subproblems. An alternating minimization strategy is used, where we cycle through the minimization of three simpler problems. This algorithm is seen to be considerably faster than approaches that alternates between sparse coding and dictionary estimation, as well as the extension of K-SVD dictionary learning scheme. The use of the \ell1 penalty and Frobenius norm dictionary constraint enables the attenuation of insignificant basis functions compared to the \ell0 norm and column norm constraint assumed in most dictionary learning algorithms; this is especially important since the number of basis functions that can be reliably estimated is restricted by the available measurements. We also observe that the proposed scheme is more robust to local minima compared to K-SVD method, which relies on greedy sparse coding. Our phase transition experiments demonstrate that the BCS scheme provides much better recovery rates than classical Fourier-based CS schemes, while being only marginally worse than the dictionary aware setting. Since the overhead in additionally estimating the dictionary is low, this method can be very useful in dynamic magnetic resonance imaging applications, where the signal is not sparse in known dictionaries. We demonstrate the utility of the BCS scheme in accelerating contrast enhanced dynamic data. We observe superior reconstruction performance with the BCS scheme in comparison to existing low rank and compressed sensing schemes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. MoDL: Model-Based Deep Learning Architecture for Inverse Problems.
- Author
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Aggarwal, Hemant K., Mani, Merry P., and Jacob, Mathews
- Subjects
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DEEP learning , *INVERSE problems , *IMAGE reconstruction , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *MATHEMATICAL regularization - Abstract
We introduce a model-based image reconstruction framework with a convolution neural network (CNN)-based regularization prior. The proposed formulation provides a systematic approach for deriving deep architectures for inverse problems with the arbitrary structure. Since the forward model is explicitly accounted for, a smaller network with fewer parameters is sufficient to capture the image information compared to direct inversion approaches. Thus, reducing the demand for training data and training time. Since we rely on end-to-end training with weight sharing across iterations, the CNN weights are customized to the forward model, thus offering improved performance over approaches that rely on pre-trained denoisers. Our experiments show that the decoupling of the number of iterations from the network complexity offered by this approach provides benefits, including lower demand for training data, reduced risk of overfitting, and implementations with significantly reduced memory footprint. We propose to enforce data-consistency by using numerical optimization blocks, such as conjugate gradients algorithm within the network. This approach offers faster convergence per iteration, compared to methods that rely on proximal gradients steps to enforce data consistency. Our experiments show that the faster convergence translates to improved performance, primarily when the available GPU memory restricts the number of iterations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Variational Manifold Learning From Incomplete Data: Application to Multislice Dynamic MRI.
- Author
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Zou, Qing, Ahmed, Abdul Haseeb, Nagpal, Prashant, Priya, Sarv, Schulte, Rolf F., and Jacob, Mathews
- Subjects
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CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging , *MACHINE learning , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DEEP learning , *IMAGE registration , *IMAGE reconstruction - Abstract
Current deep learning-based manifold learning algorithms such as the variational autoencoder (VAE) require fully sampled data to learn the probability density of real-world datasets. However, fully sampled data is often unavailable in a variety of problems, including the recovery of dynamic and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We introduce a novel variational approach to learn a manifold from undersampled data. The VAE uses a decoder fed by latent vectors, drawn from a conditional density estimated from the fully sampled images using an encoder. Since fully sampled images are not available in our setting, we approximate the conditional density of the latent vectors by a parametric model whose parameters are estimated from the undersampled measurements using back-propagation. We use the framework for the joint alignment and recovery of multi-slice free breathing and ungated cardiac MRI data from highly undersampled measurements. Experimental results demonstrate the utility of the proposed scheme in dynamic imaging alignment and reconstructions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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