| Literature DB >> 26719849 |
Alexandre Ba1, Miguel P Eckstein2, Damien Racine1, Julien G Ott1, Francis Verdun1, Sabine Kobbe-Schmidt3, François O Bochud1.
Abstract
X-ray medical imaging is increasingly becoming three-dimensional (3-D). The dose to the population and its management are of special concern in computed tomography (CT). Task-based methods with model observers to assess the dose-image quality trade-off are promising tools, but they still need to be validated for real volumetric images. The purpose of the present work is to evaluate anthropomorphic model observers in 3-D detection tasks for low-contrast CT images. We scanned a low-contrast phantom containing four types of signals at three dose levels and used two reconstruction algorithms. We implemented a multislice model observer based on the channelized Hotelling observer (msCHO) with anthropomorphic channels and investigated different internal noise methods. We found a good correlation for all tested model observers. These results suggest that the msCHO can be used as a relevant task-based method to evaluate low-contrast detection for CT and optimize scan protocols to lower dose in an efficient way.Keywords: computed tomography; image quality; model observer; observer performance evaluation; three-dimensional analysis technique; volumetric imaging
Year: 2015 PMID: 26719849 PMCID: PMC4692985 DOI: 10.1117/1.JMI.3.1.011009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ISSN: 2329-4302