DocumentCode
1288609
Title
An investigation of aliasing with Gaussian-diffusion modeling of SPECT system spatial resolution
Author
King, M.A. ; Pan, T.-S. ; Luo, D.-S.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Nucl. Med., Massachusetts Univ. Med. Center, Worcester, MA, USA
Volume
44
Issue
3
fYear
1997
fDate
6/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1375
Lastpage
1380
Abstract
The modeling of the distance-dependent spatial resolution of SPECT imaging in the projector and backprojector pair used in iterative reconstruction improves the resulting slices both quantitatively and qualitatively. By using small, spatial domain, convolution masks to model the blurring from one image plane to the next, Gaussian diffusion can markedly reduce the computational burden. The problem with Gaussian diffusion is that aliasing distorts the coefficients of the masks such that there can be a significant loss in the accuracy with which resolution is modeled. The use of integration of the probability density function of the Gaussian function over pixel boundaries as opposed to delta-function sampling, an effective value for the standard deviation of the Gaussian used in blurring from one plane to the next, and diffusion over multiple plane steps were investigated as possible methods to diminish the impact of aliasing on accuracy. For large pixel sizes the combined use of all three methods was determined to be needed to reduce the impact of aliasing on accuracy. As the pixel size decreases, the use of any of the methods results in a significant improvement in accuracy
Keywords
Gaussian distribution; image reconstruction; image resolution; iterative methods; medical image processing; single photon emission computed tomography; Gaussian function; Gaussian-diffusion modeling; SPECT imaging; SPECT system spatial resolution; accuracy; aliasing; backprojector pair; blurring; computational burden; distance-dependent spatial resolution; iterative reconstruction; masks; multiple plane steps; pixel boundaries; pixel size; probability density function; projector pair; slices; small spatial domain convolution masks; Biomedical imaging; Collimators; Convolution; Filtering; Gaussian processes; Image reconstruction; Lakes; Nuclear medicine; Sampling methods; Spatial resolution;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/23.597016
Filename
597016
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