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Deep Learning-Based Tomographic Image Reconstruction with Ultra-Sparse Projection Views

L Shen1*, W Zhao2 , X Dai3 , L Xing4 , (1) Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, (2) Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, (3) Stanford University, Mountain View, CA, (4) Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA

Presentations

(Wednesday, 7/17/2019) 10:00 AM - 10:30 AM

Room: Exhibit Hall | Forum 6

Purpose: Traditionally, a tomographic image is formulated as an inverse problem for a given set of measured data from different angular views. Here we propose a deep learning strategy of tomographic X-ray or other related imaging modalities with ultra-sparse sampling.

Methods: We develop hierarchical neural networks for imaging with ultra-sparse views and develop a structured training process for deep learning to bridge the dimensionality in X-ray or optical imaging. The essences of our approach are the introduction of a novel feature domain transformation and a robust encoding/decoding framework. The performance of the proposed approach is evaluated using digital phantoms, where projection images are digitally produced from CT images using the geometry consistent with a clinical on-board cone-beam CT system for radiation therapy. Data augmentation like organ deformation are used to produce annotated data pairs that mimic different imaging situations. The ultra-sparse view approach is also applied to optical imaging and tested using phantom studies.

Results: The deep learning model is deployed on a few cases and the single-view reconstructed results are compared with ground truth. For case 1, the averaged MAE/RMSE/SSIM/PSNR values over all testing samples for single-view reconstruction are 0.018, 0.177, 0.929, and 30.523, respectively. The indices for case 2 are found to be 0.025, 0.385, 0.838, and 27.157, respectively. Both qualitative and quantitative results demonstrate the model is capable of achieving high-quality 3D image reconstruction even with only a single or few 2D projection. Similar success was achieved in optical imaging with ultra-sparse view.

Conclusion: We propose a novel deep learning framework for volumetric imaging with ultra-sparse data sampling. This work pushes the boundary of tomographic imaging to the single-view limit and present a useful solution to many tomographic imaging modalities.

Keywords

Not Applicable / None Entered.

Taxonomy

IM- CT: Image Reconstruction

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