Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
CoreDiff: Contextual Error-Modulated Generalized Diffusion Model for Low-Dose CT Denoising and Generalization
120
Zitationen
5
Autoren
2023
Jahr
Abstract
Low-dose computed tomography (CT) images suffer from noise and artifacts due to photon starvation and electronic noise. Recently, some works have attempted to use diffusion models to address the over-smoothness and training instability encountered by previous deep-learning-based denoising models. However, diffusion models suffer from long inference time due to a large number of sampling steps involved. Very recently, cold diffusion model generalizes classical diffusion models and has greater flexibility. Inspired by cold diffusion, this paper presents a novel COntextual eRror-modulated gEneralized Diffusion model for low-dose CT (LDCT) denoising, termed CoreDiff. First, CoreDiff utilizes LDCT images to displace the random Gaussian noise and employs a novel mean-preserving degradation operator to mimic the physical process of CT degradation, significantly reducing sampling steps thanks to the informative LDCT images as the starting point of the sampling process. Second, to alleviate the error accumulation problem caused by the imperfect restoration operator in the sampling process, we propose a novel ContextuaL Error-modulAted Restoration Network (CLEAR-Net), which can leverage contextual information to constrain the sampling process from structural distortion and modulate time step embedding features for better alignment with the input at the next time step. Third, to rapidly generalize the trained model to a new, unseen dose level with as few resources as possible, we devise a one-shot learning framework to make CoreDiff generalize faster and better using only one single LDCT image (un)paired with normal-dose CT (NDCT). Extensive experimental results on four datasets demonstrate that our CoreDiff outperforms competing methods in denoising and generalization performance, with clinically acceptable inference time. Source code is made available at https://github.com/qgao21/CoreDiff.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
New response evaluation criteria in solid tumours: Revised RECIST guideline (version 1.1)
2008 · 28.906 Zit.
fastp: an ultra-fast all-in-one FASTQ preprocessor
2018 · 27.820 Zit.
Radiotherapy plus Concomitant and Adjuvant Temozolomide for Glioblastoma
2005 · 21.257 Zit.
Robust uncertainty principles: exact signal reconstruction from highly incomplete frequency information
2006 · 15.626 Zit.
Image processing with ImageJ
2004 · 11.899 Zit.