Conventional Voxel in Tomographic Reconstruction Based upon Plane-Integral Projections – Use It or Lose It?
Authors
Abstract:
Introduction: While the necessity of replacing voxels with blobs in conventional tomographic reconstruction based upon line-integrals is clear, it is not however well-investigated in plane- integral-based reconstruction. The problem is more challenging in convergent-plane projection reconstruction. In this work, we are aiming at utilizing blobs as alternative to voxels. Materials and Methods: To doing so, a spinning slithole collimated small-animal SPECT scanner was modeled within GATE simulator and SPECT data acquisition was performed for NEMA IQ phantom. The slithole provides convergent-plane-integral projections of the object being imaged. The collimation data were then reconstructed using an ad hoc 3D OSEM algorithm based upon plane-integral projections using cubic voxels. The image reconstruction was repeated for blobs. Various figures of merit were assessed in order to compare voxel and blob reconstructions. Results: Both voxel and blob reconstruction algorithms were verified using a noisy 3D Shepp- Logan phantom prior to reconstructing the simulation data, with an error of 6% and 9%, respectively. Blob modeling leads to a lower computation burden by a factor of ~2.1 in on- the-fly calculation of the system matrix. A 13% increase in SNR of the hottest rod of the NEMA IQ phantom is obtained when voxels are replaced by blobs. Blob reconstruction shows an advantage over voxel reconstruction by offering a monotonically decreasing NSE across all iterations indicating a more robust statistical noise handling. Conclusion: Voxels are simple and easy-to-implement, but blobs outperforms them by exhibiting a much more efficient projector/backprojector pair due to their inherent symmetric and smooth shape. Therefore, blobs should be the basis functions of choice in the case of plane-integral-based reconstruction.
similar resources
Use it or lose it! But use it wisely.
reasons to fit hearing aids bilaterally: better sound localization and better speech understanding in background noise. To be sure, some elderly persons may do better when fitted monaurally, perhaps due to an age-related interaural interference effect, but these two principal advantages of bilateral fittings have been demonstrated many times over in the majority of hearing aid users. In this is...
full textCytoplasmic mRNA: move it, use it or lose it!
Once an mRNA is synthesized and processed, the immediate translation and later destruction of the transcript is not as inevitable as the central molecular biology dogma suggests. Interest in the field of post-transcriptional control continues to grow rapidly, as regulation of these multiple steps in gene expression is implicated in diverse aspects of biology such as metabolism, neurology, repro...
full textSystematic data in biodiversity studies: use it or lose it.
Systematic data in the form of collections data are useful in biodiversity studies in many ways, most importantly because they serve as the only direct evidence of species distributions. However, collecting bias has been demonstrated for most areas of the world and has led some to propose methods that circumvent the need for collections data. New methods that model collections data in combinati...
full textBrain aging and Alzheimer's disease; use it or lose it.
(1) Alzheimer's disease is a multifactorial disease in which age and APOE-epsilon 4 are important risk factors. (2) The neuropathological hallmarks of AD, i.e. amorphous plaques, neuritic plaques (NPs), pretangles, neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) and cell death are not part of a single pathogenetic cascade but may occur independently. (3) In brain areas where classical AD changes, i.e. NPs and NF...
full textTelomere stability--Wnt it or lose it.
Telomeres in ageing and cancer Capping of chromosome ends is essential for the stability of linear chromosomes. It requires a minimum length of telomeric DNA, which can be synthesized and elongated by the enzyme telomerase. In addition, functional telomeres depend on the coordinated expression of a group of proteins that bind to telomeric DNA. These proteins are known as components of the shelt...
full textScarcity of Ideas and R & D Options : Use It , Lose It or Bank It
This paper expands and supersedes the first part of our 2007 paper "Scarcity of Ideas and Options to Invest in R&D." We especially thank Jennifer Reinganum for her comments at the Fifth Summer Workshop in Industrial Organization in Auckland. We also thank Michael Katz, Stephen Maurer, Robert Merges, Deborah Minehart, Paul Seabright, Brian Wright and participants of the 2008 Research Symposium o...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 15 issue Special Issue-12th. Iranian Congress of Medical Physics
pages 269- 269
publication date 2018-12-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023