Deep learning for undersampled MRI reconstruction.

Journal: Physics in medicine and biology
Published Date:

Abstract

This paper presents a deep learning method for faster magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) by reducing k-space data with sub-Nyquist sampling strategies and provides a rationale for why the proposed approach works well. Uniform subsampling is used in the time-consuming phase-encoding direction to capture high-resolution image information, while permitting the image-folding problem dictated by the Poisson summation formula. To deal with the localization uncertainty due to image folding, a small number of low-frequency k-space data are added. Training the deep learning net involves input and output images that are pairs of the Fourier transforms of the subsampled and fully sampled k-space data. Our experiments show the remarkable performance of the proposed method; only 29[Formula: see text] of the k-space data can generate images of high quality as effectively as standard MRI reconstruction with the fully sampled data.

Authors

  • Chang Min Hyun
    Department of Computational Science and Engineering, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
  • Hwa Pyung Kim
  • Sung Min Lee
  • Sungchul Lee
  • Jin Keun Seo