4.6 Article

Unsupervised metal artifacts reduction network for CT images based on efficient transformer

Journal

BIOMEDICAL SIGNAL PROCESSING AND CONTROL
Volume 89, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bspc.2023.105753

Keywords

Computed tomography; Metal artifacts reduction; Unsupervised learning; Deep learning; CycleGAN

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This paper proposes an unsupervised CycleGAN model based on the efficient Transformer for metal artifact reduction in CT images. The model correlates global features through attention mechanisms and generates vital features to enhance the consistency of recovery information. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms existing methods in suppressing metal artifacts.
In computed tomography (CT) imaging, artifacts caused by metals can seriously interfere with the accurate judgment, evaluation, and analysis of object structures. Deep learning presented new opportunities for minimizing metal artifacts. The currently proposed supervised methods mainly resort to simulated data for network training, which is difficult to be applied in real scenarios. Unsupervised methods do not completely suppress artifacts and are prone to instability in the corrected results. Therefore, this paper proposes an unsupervised CycleGAN model based on the efficient Transformer for metal artifact reduction in CT images. The encoder and decoder based on the efficient Transformer achieve the extraction and processing of global image content features and artifact features. By correlating global features through attention mechanisms, vital features are generated to enhance the consistency of recovery information. The efficient Transformer framework reduces the computational complexity of the attention mechanism, allowing efficient processing of standard medical CT images with 512 x 512 pixels. Projection preserving loss uses the metal trace outer projection as a fidelity constraint to overcome the problem that unsupervised networks are difficult to train and prone to spurious information. Experimental results indicate that the proposed method outperforms the original CycleGAN and ADN networks in suppressing metal artifacts while avoiding introducing spurious structures. Specifically, the proposed method improved the PSNR of the correction results by 9.23% and reduced the NMAD by 13.21% compared to the original CycleGAN, and improved the PSNR by 5.17% and reduced the NMAD by 5.57% compared to the ADN.

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