DocumentCode
1622159
Title
A filter design for optimization of lesion detection in SPECT
Author
Kim, J.H. ; Kim, K.I. ; Kwark, C.E.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Math., Pohang Inst. of Sci. & Technol., South Korea
Volume
3
fYear
1996
Firstpage
1683
Abstract
Recently, we proposed a filter formulation for effective lesion detection in an attempt to increase the local S/N ratio of a lesion corresponding to the SPECT lesion detection limit. The filter function is composed of (1) an exactly-derived theoretical filter (that is a multiplication of a GAUSS filter whose resolution is determined by the estimated minimum detectable lesion size (MDLS) and an inverse detector system MTF), and (2) a designed Butterworth filter for controlling the extent to which the theoretical filter is followed before our filter switches to noise suppression. In this work, a frequency cut-off design by the Butterworth filter was made as a function of (MDLS/system resolution) ratio, with respect to a MDLS-dependent frequency point that was determined based on a simple object model. The simulation studies demonstrated better performance of our filter on lesion detectability over the conventional SPECT filters. Especially with this Butterworth filter design, we considerably reduced the potential hazards of our filter, that were observed in large system resolution cases as a form of structured noise for high-count and high-contrast cases, and as a form of excessive smoothing of image contrast for low count and low-contrast cases
Keywords
Butterworth filters; image reconstruction; image resolution; medical image processing; single photon emission computed tomography; smoothing methods; Butterworth filter; GAUSS filter; MDLS; MDLS-dependent frequency point; MDLS/system resolution ratio; SPECT; SPECT lesion detection limit; designed Butterworth filter; estimated minimum detectable lesion size; exactly-derived theoretical filter; filter design; filter function; frequency cut-off design; high contrast; high count; inverse detector system MTF; large system resolution cases; lesion detection; local S/N ratio; low contrast; low count; noise suppression; optimization; resolution; simple object model; structured noise; Control systems; Cutoff frequency; Design optimization; Detectors; Filters; Gaussian noise; Hazards; Lesions; Size control; Switches;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium, 1996. Conference Record., 1996 IEEE
Conference_Location
Anaheim, CA
ISSN
1082-3654
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3534-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.1996.587952
Filename
587952
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