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Multi-Tissue Decomposition of Diffusion MRI Signals via l(0) Sparse-Group Estimation

Authors
Yap, Pew-ThianZhang, YongShen, Dinggang
Issue Date
9월-2016
Publisher
IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
Keywords
Diffusion MRI; fiber orientation distribution function (FODF); sparse-group approximation; l(0) regularization
Citation
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING, v.25, no.9, pp.4340 - 4353
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING
Volume
25
Number
9
Start Page
4340
End Page
4353
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/87587
DOI
10.1109/TIP.2016.2588328
ISSN
1057-7149
Abstract
Sparse estimation techniques are widely utilized in diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (DMRI). In this paper, we present an algorithm for solving the l(0) sparse-group estimation problem and apply it to the tissue signal separation problem in DMRI. Our algorithm solves the l(0) problem directly, unlike existing approaches that often seek to solve its relaxed approximations. We include the mathematical proofs showing that the algorithm will converge to a solution satisfying the first-order optimality condition within a finite number of iterations. We apply this algorithm to DMRI data to tease apart signal contributions from white matter, gray matter, and cerebrospinal fluid with the aim of improving the estimation of the fiber orientation distribution function (FODF). Unlike spherical deconvolution approaches that assume an invariant fiber response function (RF), our approach utilizes an RF group to span the signal subspace of each tissue type, allowing greater flexibility in accounting for possible variations of the RF throughout space and within each voxel. Our l(0) algorithm allows for the natural groupings of the RFs to be considered during signal decomposition. Experimental results confirm that our method yields estimates of FODFs and volume fractions of tissue compartments with improved robustness and accuracy. Our l(0) algorithm is general and can be applied to sparse estimation problems beyond the scope of this paper.
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