Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting with compressed sensing and distance metric learning
This work addresses efficiency and accuracy issues in MRF for medical imaging, representing an incremental improvement through hybrid methods.
The paper tackles aliasing artifacts and suboptimal distance metrics in Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting (MRF) by proposing a compressed sensing framework with distance metric learning, resulting in substantially improved parameter estimation accuracy over state-of-the-art methods in simulations.
Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting (MRF) is a novel technique that simultaneously estimates multiple tissue-related parameters, such as the longitudinal relaxation time T1, the transverse relaxation time T2, off resonance frequency B0 and proton density, from a scanned object in just tens of seconds. However, the MRF method suffers from aliasing artifacts because it significantly undersamples the k-space data. In this work, we propose a compressed sensing (CS) framework for simultaneously estimating multiple tissue-related parameters based on the MRF method. It is more robust to low sampling ratio and is therefore more efficient in estimating MR parameters for all voxels of an object. Furthermore, the MRF method requires identifying the nearest atoms of the query fingerprints from the MR-signal-evolution dictionary with the L2 distance. However, we observed that the L2 distance is not always a proper metric to measure the similarities between MR Fingerprints. Adaptively learning a distance metric from the undersampled training data can significantly improve the matching accuracy of the query fingerprints. Numerical results on extensive simulated cases show that our method substantially outperforms stateof-the-art methods in terms of accuracy of parameter estimation.