Title :
A channelized-hotelling-trace collimator design method based on reconstruction rather than projections
Author :
Zeng, Gengsheng L. ; Gullberg, Grant T.
Author_Institution :
Med. Imaging Res. Lab., Utah Univ., Salt Lake City, UT, USA
fDate :
10/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In this paper, a new single-photon emission-computed tomography (SPECT) collimator design technique is investigated. In this feasibility study, the collimator hole diameter is the only design variable changed. Other collimator parameters are fixed to a low-energy-high-resolution (LEHR) design. The design is based on a task of imaging a small hot lesion with a uniform background. A channelized hotelling trace is used to quantify the lesion detectability in a reconstructed image for a particular collimator parameter. The unique feature of this development is that the image quality is not evaluated for planar projection data, but rather is evaluated for the reconstructed tomographic image with an ordered-subset expectation-maximization reconstruction algorithm. Our results suggest that a collimator hole size that is larger than the LEHR collimator hole size is preferable for lesion detection. In SPECT, the optimal collimator design should be reconstruction algorithm dependent.
Keywords :
image reconstruction; single photon emission computed tomography; SPECT; channelized-hotelling-trace collimator; collimator design; lesion detectability; low-energy-high-resolution; optimal collimator design; reconstructed image; reconstruction; Collimators; Design methodology; Detectors; Electromagnetic scattering; Image reconstruction; Lesions; Medical signal detection; Reconstruction algorithms; Single photon emission computed tomography; Spatial resolution;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2002.803775