1. SPICER: Self-supervised learning for MRI with automatic coil sensitivity estimation and reconstruction.
- Author
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Hu Y, Gan W, Ying C, Wang T, Eldeniz C, Liu J, Chen Y, An H, and Kamilov US
- Subjects
- Humans, Supervised Machine Learning, Brain diagnostic imaging, Deep Learning, Phantoms, Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Neural Networks, Computer, Algorithms
- Abstract
Purpose: To introduce a novel deep model-based architecture (DMBA), SPICER, that uses pairs of noisy and undersampled k-space measurements of the same object to jointly train a model for MRI reconstruction and automatic coil sensitivity estimation., Methods: SPICER consists of two modules to simultaneously reconstructs accurate MR images and estimates high-quality coil sensitivity maps (CSMs). The first module, CSM estimation module, uses a convolutional neural network (CNN) to estimate CSMs from the raw measurements. The second module, DMBA-based MRI reconstruction module, forms reconstructed images from the input measurements and the estimated CSMs using both the physical measurement model and learned CNN prior. With the benefit of our self-supervised learning strategy, SPICER can be efficiently trained without any fully sampled reference data., Results: We validate SPICER on both open-access datasets and experimentally collected data, showing that it can achieve state-of-the-art performance in highly accelerated data acquisition settings (up to 10 × $$ 10\times $$ ). Our results also highlight the importance of different modules of SPICER-including the DMBA, the CSM estimation, and the SPICER training loss-on the final performance of the method. Moreover, SPICER can estimate better CSMs than pre-estimation methods especially when the ACS data is limited., Conclusion: Despite being trained on noisy undersampled data, SPICER can reconstruct high-quality images and CSMs in highly undersampled settings, which outperforms other self-supervised learning methods and matches the performance of the well-known E2E-VarNet trained on fully sampled ground-truth data., (© 2024 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2024
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