Title :
Fast 2-D ultrasound strain imaging: the benefits of using a GPU
Author :
Idzenga, Tim ; Gaburov, Evghenii ; Vermin, Willem ; Menssen, Jan ; De Korte, Chris
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Radboud Univ. Nijmegen Med. Centre, Nijmegen, Netherlands
Abstract :
Deformation of tissue can be accurately estimated from radio-frequency ultrasound data using a 2-dimensional normalized cross correlation (NCC)-based algorithm. This procedure, however, is very computationally time-consuming. A major time reduction can be achieved by parallelizing the numerous computations of NCC. In this paper, two approaches for parallelization have been investigated: the OpenMP interface on a multi-CPU system and Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA) on a graphics processing unit (GPU). The performance of the OpenMP and GPU approaches were compared with a conventional Matlab implementation of NCC. The OpenMP approach with 8 threads achieved a maximum speed-up factor of 132 on the computing of NCC, whereas the GPU approach on an Nvidia Tesla K20 achieved a maximum speed-up factor of 376. Neither parallelization approach resulted in a significant loss in image quality of the elastograms. Parallelization of the NCC computations using the GPU, therefore, significantly reduces the computation time and increases the frame rate for motion estimation.
Keywords :
biological tissues; biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; deformation; graphics processing units; medical image processing; parallel architectures; strain measurement; ultrasonic imaging; 2D NCC based algorithm; 2D normalized cross correlation based algorithm; CUDA; Compute Unified Device Architecture; GPU; NCC parallelization; Nvidia Tesla K20; OpenMP interface; elastogram image quality; fast 2D ultrasound strain imaging; graphics processing unit; motion estimation frame rate; multiCPU system; radiofrequency ultrasound data; tissue deformation; Correlation; Graphics processing units; Imaging; Instruction sets; Kernel; Strain; Ultrasonic imaging;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2014.2893