4.7 Article

Medical Image Fusion With Parameter-Adaptive Pulse Coupled Neural Network in Nonsubsampled Shearlet Transform Domain

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIM.2018.2838778

Keywords

Activity level measure; image fusion; medical imaging; nonsubsampled shearlet transform (NSST); pulse coupled neural network (PCNN)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61701160, 11601115, 81571760, 61501164]
  2. Provincial Natural Science Foundation of Anhui [1808085QF186]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [JZ2018HGTB0228, JZ2016HGBZ1025]

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As an effective way to integrate the information contained in multiple medical images with different modalities, medical image fusion has emerged as a powerful technique in various clinical applications such as disease diagnosis and treatment planning. In this paper, a new multimodal medical image fusion method in nonsubsampled shearlet transform (NSST) domain is proposed. In the proposed method, the NSST decomposition is first performed on the source images to obtain their multiscale and multidirection representations. The high-frequency bands are fused by a parameter-adaptive pulse-coupled neural network (PA-PCNN) model, in which all the PCNN parameters can be adaptively estimated by the input band. The low-frequency bands are merged by a novel strategy that simultaneously addresses two crucial issues in medical image fusion, namely, energy preservation and detail extraction. Finally, the fused image is reconstructed by performing inverse NSST on the fused high-frequency and low-frequency bands. The effectiveness of the proposed method is verified by four different categories of medical image fusion problems [computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR), MR-T1 and MR-T2, MR and positron emission tomography, and MR and singlephoton emission CT] with more than 80 pairs of source images in total. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method can obtain more competitive performance in comparison to nine representative medical image fusion methods, leading to state-of-the-art results on both visual quality and objective assessment.

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