Cross noise level PET denoising with continuous adversarial domain generalization
Objective Performing PET denoising within the image space proves effective in reducing the variance in PET images. In recent years, deep learning has demonstrated superior denoising performance, but models trained on a specific noise level typically fail to generalize well on different noise levels,...
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Published in | Physics in medicine & biology Vol. 69; no. 8; pp. 85001 - 85013 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
IOP Publishing
21.04.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Objective Performing PET denoising within the image space proves effective in reducing the variance in PET images. In recent years, deep learning has demonstrated superior denoising performance, but models trained on a specific noise level typically fail to generalize well on different noise levels, due to inherent distribution shifts between inputs. The distribution shift usually results in bias in the denoised images. Our goal is to tackle such a problem using a domain generalization technique. Approach We propose to utilize the domain generalization technique with a novel feature space continuous discriminator (CD) for adversarial training, using the fraction of events as a continuous domain label. The core idea is to enforce the extraction of noise-level invariant features. Thus minimizing the distribution divergence of latent feature representation for different continuous noise levels, and making the model general for arbitrary noise levels. We created three sets of 10%, 13-22% (uniformly randomly selected), or 25% fractions of events from 97 $^{18}$F-MK6240 tau PET studies of 60 subjects. For each set, we generated 20 noise realizations. Training, validation, and testing were implemented using 1400, 120, and 420 pairs of 3D image volumes from the same or different sets. Main results The proposed CD improves the denoising performance of our model trained in a 13-22% fraction set for testing in both 10% and 25% fraction sets, measured by bias and standard deviation using full-count images as references. In addition, our CD method can improve the SSIM and PSNR consistently for Alzheimer-related regions and the whole brain. Significance To our knowledge, this is the first attempt to alleviate the performance degradation in cross-noise level denoising from the perspective of domain generalization. Our study is also a pioneer work of continuous domain generalization. |
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Bibliography: | PMB-115919.R2 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0031-9155 1361-6560 1361-6560 |
DOI: | 10.1088/1361-6560/ad341a |