A foveated channelized Hotelling observer model extended to anatomical liver CT images
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_1857C38EAC2D
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Poster: Summary – with images – on one page of the results of a researche project. The summaries of the poster must be entered in "Abstract" and not "Poster".
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A foveated channelized Hotelling observer model extended to anatomical liver CT images
Title of the conference
Medical Imaging 2024: Image Perception, Observer Performance, and Technology Assessment
Organization
SPIE MEDICAL IMAGING, 18-23 February 2024
Address
San Diego, California, United States
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/2024
Volume
12929
Pages
209-218
Language
english
Abstract
Objective assessment of medical image quality can be performed with mathematical model observers matched to radiologists. Foveated channelized Hotelling observer models (FCHO) have been shown to be more accurate predictors of the human search performance in simulated 3D images than standard model observers such as the ideal observer or the non-prewhitening observer with eye filter. However, nothing is known about the performance of FCHOs with the computed tomography (CT) modality as well as with images extracted from real patients. Patient-extracted images are smaller than simulated images and their size could be limiting for FCHOs as peripheral vision is modeled by an increasing spatial extent of channels. This study has two aims: to extend a foveated model observer to 2D anatomical liver CT images and to find channel parameters enabling the FCHO to match human performance. Regions of interest (ROIs) were automatically extracted from CT images of five patients’ livers and their size was of 100x100 pixels, a balance between the anatomical constraints and the modeling of peripheral vision. Two radiologist-validated small low-contrast hypodense hepatic metastases were simulated to generate signal-present ROIs. The signal diameters were of 1 cm relatively to the patient and their contrast of -50 HU. The foveated model observer used was a FCHO with dense difference-of-Gaussians channels that were optimized to the size of the extracted ROIs. The performance of the optimized FCHO could reproduce human performance for a detection task in anatomical liver CT images within standard error up to 9 degrees of visual angle. This study shows that optimized FCHOs could be used in more anthropomorphic assessments of image quality of CT units.
Create date
13/05/2024 15:13
Last modification date
28/05/2024 6:09