학술논문

Low-Dose CT Image Denoising Model Based on Sparse Representation by Stationarily Classified Sub-Dictionaries
Document Type
article
Source
IEEE Access, Vol 7, Pp 116859-116874 (2019)
Subject
Low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) image denoising
sparse representation
stationary sub-dictionaries
the maximum eigenvalue of the gradient covariance matrix
total variation (TV)
the clipped and normalized local activity
Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering
TK1-9971
Language
English
ISSN
2169-3536
Abstract
Low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) technique is an important imaging modality, but LDCT images are always severely degraded by mottle noise and streak artifacts. The recently proposed nonlocally centralized sparse representation (NCSR) algorithm has good performance in natural image denoising, but it suffers from residual streak artifacts and can't preserve edges structure information well when implemented in LDCT image denoising. In addition, it has high computational complexity. To address this problem, in this paper, we propose an improved model, i.e. SNCSR model, based on the stationary PCA sub-dictionaries, nonlocally centralized sparse representation and relative total variation. In the SNCSR model, in order to learn more accurate sub-dictionaries, the LDCT image is preprocessed by the improved total variation (ITV) model in which the weighted coefficient of the regularization term is constructed depending on a clipped and normalized local activity. In addition, the maximum eigenvalue of the gradient covariance matrix of the image patch is used to distinguish edge structure information from background region so that the restored image can be represented more sparsely. Moreover, unlike the NCSR model that needs to learn sub-dictionaries in each outer loop, the proposed model learns stationary sub-dictionaries only once before iteration starts, which shorten the computation time significantly. At last, the relative total variation (RTV) algorithm is applied to further reduce the residual artifacts in the recovered image more thoroughly. The experiments are performed on the simulated pelvis phantom, the actual thoracic phantom and the clinical abdominal data. Compared with several other competitive denoising algorithms, both subjective visual effect and objective evaluation criteria show that the proposed SNCSR model has lower computational complexity and can improve LDCT images quality more effectively.