After inquiring about it, Cagdas Bilen sent me the following:
Hi Igor,We now have our simulation codes published in our website (http://vision.poly.edu/cbilen/index.php?n=Main.Research) for anybody interested. The same website also has a link to and information about our other work on compressed sensing reconstruction with the aid of (simultaneous) motion estimation/compensation, the codes for which will also be published in the same website soon.I hope your readers find it interesting.Best,Cagdas
The paper is: High Speed Compressed Sensing Reconstruction in Dynamic Parallel MRI Using Augmented Lagrangian and Parallel Processing by
Cagdas Bilen , Yao Wang and Ivan Selesnick. The abstract reads:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is one of the fields that the compressed sensing theory is well utilized to reduce the scan time significantly leading to faster imaging or higher resolution images. It has been shown that a small fraction of the overall measurements are sufficient to reconstruct images with the combination of compressed sensing and parallel imaging. Various reconstruction algorithms has been proposed for compressed sensing, among which Augmented Lagrangian based methods have been shown to often perform better than others for many different applications. In this paper, we propose new Augmented Lagrangian based solutions to the compressed sensing reconstruction problem with analysis and synthesis prior formulations. We also propose a computational method which makes use of properties of the sampling pattern to significantly improve the speed of the reconstruction for the proposed algorithms in Cartesian sampled MRI. The proposed algorithms are shown to outperform earlier methods especially for the case of dynamic MRI for which the transfer function tends to be a very large matrix and significantly ill conditioned. It is also demonstrated that the proposed algorithm can be accelerated much further than other methods in case of a parallel implementation with graphics processing units (GPUs).
also of related interest: Compressed Sensing for Moving Imagery in Medical Imaging by Cagdas Bilen, Yao Wang and Ivan Selesnick. The abstract reads:
Numerous applications in signal processing have benefited from the theory of compressed sensing which shows that it is possible to reconstruct signals sampled below the Nyquist rate when certain conditions are satisfied. One of these conditions is that there exists a known transform that represents the signal with a sufficiently small number of non-zero coefficients. However when the signal to be reconstructed is composed of moving images or volumes, it is challenging to form such regularization constraints with traditional transforms such as wavelets. In this paper, we present a motion compensating prior for such signals that is derived directly from the optical flow constraint and can utilize the motion information during compressed sensing reconstruction. Proposed regularization method can be used in a wide variety of applications involving compressed sensing and images or volumes of moving and deforming objects. It is also shown that it is possible to estimate the signal and the motion jointly or separately. Practical examples from magnetic resonance imaging has been presented to demonstrate the benefit of the proposed method.
Thanks Cagdas !
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Hi Igor,
ReplyDeleteThose links have been moved.
Could you please update the new ones?
i direclly asked Cagdas. We'll see. Did you look around ?
ReplyDeleteIgor.
I also looked at his new website but it seems like he is pretty new in INRIA and his homepage is still not fully updated yet :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot.
An Nguyen
Cagdan's publication page is here: http://people.rennes.inria.fr/Cagdas.Bilen/?page_id=8
ReplyDeleteand he jus tmentioned to me that his code is here:
http://people.rennes.inria.fr/Cagdas.Bilen/public/HighSpeedMRI_20120426.zip
Cheers,
Igor.
Thanks a lot, Igor.
ReplyDeleteI can proceed to download the new links.
Bests,
An Nguyen