MCDIP-ADMM: Overcoming Overfitting in DIP-based CT reconstruction
This addresses overfitting in unsupervised CT reconstruction for medical imaging, but is incremental as it builds on existing DIP and ADMM frameworks.
The paper tackles overfitting in deep image prior (DIP) methods for CT reconstruction by proposing MCDIP-ADMM, which uses multiple latent codes and plug-and-play ADMM. It achieves average PSNR improvements of 4.3 dB over DIP and up to 1.86 dB over other competitors in noisy projection scenarios.
This paper investigates the application of unsupervised learning methods for computed tomography (CT) reconstruction. To motivate our work, we review several existing priors, namely the truncated Gaussian prior, the $l_1$ prior, the total variation prior, and the deep image prior (DIP). We find that DIP outperforms the other three priors in terms of representational capability and visual performance. However, the performance of DIP deteriorates when the number of iterations exceeds a certain threshold due to overfitting. To address this issue, we propose a novel method (MCDIP-ADMM) based on Multi-Code Deep Image Prior and plug-and-play Alternative Direction Method of Multipliers. Specifically, MCDIP utilizes multiple latent codes to generate a series of feature maps at an intermediate layer within a generator model. These maps are then composed with trainable weights, representing the complete image prior. Experimental results demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed MCDIP-ADMM compared to three existing competitors. In the case of parallel beam projection with Gaussian noise, MCDIP-ADMM achieves an average improvement of 4.3 dB over DIP, 1.7 dB over ADMM DIP-WTV, and 1.2 dB over PnP-DIP in terms of PSNR. Similarly, for fan-beam projection with Poisson noise, MCDIP-ADMM achieves an average improvement of 3.09 dB over DIP, 1.86 dB over ADMM DIP-WTV, and 0.84 dB over PnP-DIP in terms of PSNR.