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Suppression of MRI Truncation Artifacts Using Total Variation Constrained Data Extrapolation
Author(s) -
Kai Tobias Block,
Martin Uecker,
Jens Frahm
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
international journal of biomedical imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.626
H-Index - 41
eISSN - 1687-4196
pISSN - 1687-4188
DOI - 10.1155/2008/184123
Subject(s) - truncation (statistics) , computer science , imaging phantom , algorithm , reduction (mathematics) , piecewise , ringing artifacts , spurious relationship , extrapolation , synthetic data , noise reduction , minification , noise (video) , total variation denoising , mathematical optimization , image (mathematics) , mathematics , artificial intelligence , statistics , physics , mathematical analysis , geometry , machine learning , optics
The finite sampling of k -space in MRI causes spurious image artifacts, known as Gibbs ringing, which result from signal truncation at the border of k -space. The effect is especially visible for acquisitions at low resolution and commonly reduced by filtering at the expense of image blurring. The present work demonstrates that the simple assumption of a piecewise-constant object can be exploited to extrapolate the data in k -space beyond the measured part. The method allows for a significant reduction of truncation artifacts without compromising resolution. The assumption translates into a total variation minimization problem, which can be solved with a nonlinear optimization algorithm. In the presence of substantial noise, a modified approach offers edge-preserving denoising by allowing for slight deviations from the measured data in addition to supplementing data. The effectiveness of these methods is demonstrated with simulations as well as experimental data for a phantom and human brain in vivo.

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