DocumentCode
928447
Title
Quantifying the Partial Volume Effect in PET Using Benford´s Law
Author
Wells, Kevin ; Chiverton, John ; Partridge, Mike ; Barry, Miriam ; Kadhem, Haval ; Ott, Bob
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electron. & Phys. Sci., Univ. of Surrey, Guildford, UK
Volume
54
Issue
5
fYear
2007
Firstpage
1616
Lastpage
1625
Abstract
Partial volume (PV) correction techniques in PET or SPECT represents a key step in image quantification methods. The PV effect arises because of the blurring induced by the imaging system´s point spread function (PSF), producing intra-voxel mixing of the signals arising from different functional tissue classes. Quantification of this effect is often required to recover the mixing components within a group of voxels, from whence the true tissue concentration in a given volume or region can be estimated. In this work we consider a probabilistic methodology that uses a phenomenological distribution known as Benford´s law to quantify the partial volume effect. We establish for the first time, that the probability distribution of voxels subjected to the PV effect in discrete volumetric data can be well described by Benford´s law. The probabilistic framework devised here can be applied generically across different imaging modalities including PET and SPECT. Results from simulated data are presented, along with a PET phantom study utilizing registered processed CT data as ground truth, to determine the quality of the resulting probabilistic voxel classification scheme. For a water filled hot insert using a 5:1 insert:background activity concentration, we find an overall voxel RMS error of 3% (compared to ground truth) in the estimated voxel mixing vectors. This error rises to 8% for a cold air-filled insert in a warm background.
Keywords
biological tissues; medical image processing; phantoms; positron emission tomography; probability; single photon emission computed tomography; Benford´s law; PET phantom; SPECT; image quantification methods; intra-voxel mixing; partial volume correction techniques; partial volume effect; point spread function; probabilistic voxel classification scheme; probability distribution; tissue concentration; Computed tomography; Data mining; High-resolution imaging; Image analysis; Image segmentation; Imaging phantoms; Magnetic resonance imaging; Positron emission tomography; Probability distribution; Spatial resolution; Benford´s Law; PET; image quantitation; partial volume;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.2007.903182
Filename
4346748
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