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Evaluation of a combined two- and three-dimensional compression method using human visual characteristics to yield high-quality 10:1 compression of cranial computed tomography scans.

Authors :
Frank MS
Lee H
Kim Y
Rowberg AH
Lee W
Riskin EA
Source :
Investigative radiology [Invest Radiol] 1994 Sep; Vol. 29 (9), pp. 842-7.
Publication Year :
1994

Abstract

Rationale and Objectives: The compression of cranial computed tomography scans was improved by using independent intra- and interframe compression techniques.<br />Methods: For intraframe compression, an image was decomposed into four subimages, one subimage was chosen as a reference subimage, and three of the subimages were predicted from the reference subimage. The prediction error was encoded with a classified vector quantizer (CVQ) based on human visual perception characteristics. Interframe redundancy is exploited by a displacement estimated interslice (DEI) algorithm that encodes the differences between reference subimages from adjacent slices. This combined DEI/CVQ method was subjectively evaluated by 13 radiologists under a blinded protocol, and was compared to the CVQ method alone, the DEI method alone, the original images, and to a standard intraframe discrete cosine transform (DCT) compression method.<br />Results: Only the combined DEI/CVQ method at 10:1 compression was not scored significantly different from the original images. At 15:1 compression, the DEI/CVQ method was scored significantly better than the 10:1 DCT and any other 15:1 compression methods.<br />Conclusions: Compressed image quality is enhanced by exploiting inter- and intraframe redundancy, and by modeling some characteristics of human visual perception. The DEI/CVQ method is well-suited for progressive transmission, and thus, holds potential in teleradiology as well as picture archiving and communications systems.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0020-9996
Volume :
29
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Investigative radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
7995704
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/00004424-199409000-00008