Paper detail

Deep Learning Improves Dataset Recovery for High Frame Rate Synthetic Transmit Aperture Imaging

Synthetic transmit aperture (STA) imaging can achieve optimal lateral resolution in the full field of view, at the cost of low frame rate (FR) and low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In our previous studies, compressed sensing based synthetic transmit aperture (CS-STA) and minimal l2-norm least squares (LS-STA) methods were proposed to recover the complete STA dataset from fewer Hadamard-encoded plane wave (PW) transmissions. Results demonstrated that, compared with STA imaging, CS/LS-STA can maintain the high resolution of STA and improve the contrast in the deep region with increased FR. However, these methods would introduce errors to the recovered STA datasets and subsequently produce severe artifacts to the beamformed images. Recently, we discovered that the theoretical explanation for the error introduced in the LS-STA-based recovery is that LS-STA method neglects the null space component of the real STA data. To deal with this problem, we propose to train a convolutional neural network (CNN) under the null space learning framework (to estimate the missing null space component) for high-accuracy recovery of the STA dataset from fewer Hadamard-encoded PW transmissions. The mapping between the low-quality STA dataset (recovered using the LS-STA method) and the corresponding high-quality STA dataset (obtained using full Hadamard-encoded STA imaging, HE-STA) was learned from phantom and in vivo samples. The performance of the proposed CNN-STA method was compared with the LS-STA, STA, and HE-STA methods, in terms of visual quality, NRMSE, gCNR, and FWHM. The results demonstrate that the proposed method can improve the recovery accuracy of the STA datasets and therefore effectively suppress the artifacts presented in the images obtained using the LS-STA method. In addition, the proposed method can maintain the high lateral resolution of STA with fewer PW transmissions, as LS-STA does.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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