CVAug 23, 2024
Optimal OnTheFly Feedback Control of Event SensorsValery Vishnevskiy, Greg Burman, Sebastian Kozerke et al.
Event-based vision sensors produce an asynchronous stream of events which are triggered when the pixel intensity variation exceeds a predefined threshold. Such sensors offer significant advantages, including reduced data redundancy, micro-second temporal resolution, and low power consumption, making them valuable for applications in robotics and computer vision. In this work, we consider the problem of video reconstruction from events, and propose an approach for dynamic feedback control of activation thresholds, in which a controller network analyzes the past emitted events and predicts the optimal distribution of activation thresholds for the following time segment. Additionally, we allow a user-defined target peak-event-rate for which the control network is conditioned and optimized to predict per-column activation thresholds that would eventually produce the best possible video reconstruction. The proposed OnTheFly control scheme is data-driven and trained in an end-to-end fashion using probabilistic relaxation of the discrete event representation. We demonstrate that our approach outperforms both fixed and randomly-varying threshold schemes by 6-12% in terms of LPIPS perceptual image dissimilarity metric, and by 49% in terms of event rate, achieving superior reconstruction quality while enabling a fine-tuned balance between performance accuracy and the event rate. Additionally, we show that sampling strategies provided by our OnTheFly control are interpretable and reflect the characteristics of the scene. Our results, derived from a physically-accurate simulator, underline the promise of the proposed methodology in enhancing the utility of event cameras for image reconstruction and other downstream tasks, paving the way for hardware implementation of dynamic feedback EVS control in silicon.
CVJul 18, 2025
Localized FNO for Spatiotemporal Hemodynamic Upsampling in Aneurysm MRIKyriakos Flouris, Moritz Halter, Yolanne Y. R. Lee et al.
Hemodynamic analysis is essential for predicting aneurysm rupture and guiding treatment. While magnetic resonance flow imaging enables time-resolved volumetric blood velocity measurements, its low spatiotemporal resolution and signal-to-noise ratio limit its diagnostic utility. To address this, we propose the Localized Fourier Neural Operator (LoFNO), a novel 3D architecture that enhances both spatial and temporal resolution with the ability to predict wall shear stress (WSS) directly from clinical imaging data. LoFNO integrates Laplacian eigenvectors as geometric priors for improved structural awareness on irregular, unseen geometries and employs an Enhanced Deep Super-Resolution Network (EDSR) layer for robust upsampling. By combining geometric priors with neural operator frameworks, LoFNO de-noises and spatiotemporally upsamples flow data, achieving superior velocity and WSS predictions compared to interpolation and alternative deep learning methods, enabling more precise cerebrovascular diagnostics.
IVApr 20, 2020
Deep variational network for rapid 4D flow MRI reconstructionValery Vishnevskiy, Jonas Walheim, Sebastian Kozerke
Phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides time-resolved quantification of blood flow dynamics that can aid clinical diagnosis. Long in vivo scan times due to repeated three-dimensional (3D) volume sampling over cardiac phases and breathing cycles necessitate accelerated imaging techniques that leverage data correlations. Standard compressed sensing reconstruction methods require tuning of hyperparameters and are computationally expensive, which diminishes the potential reduction of examination times. We propose an efficient model-based deep neural reconstruction network and evaluate its performance on clinical aortic flow data. The network is shown to reconstruct undersampled 4D flow MRI data in under a minute on standard consumer hardware. Remarkably, the relatively low amounts of tunable parameters allowed the network to be trained on images from 11 reference scans while generalizing well to retrospective and prospective undersampled data for various acceleration factors and anatomies.