DIMA: DIffusing Motion Artifacts for unsupervised correction in brain MRI images
This addresses the challenge of motion artifact correction in MRI for clinical settings, where paired data is scarce, making it more accessible for routine use, though it is incremental as it builds on existing diffusion model techniques.
The paper tackled the problem of motion artifacts in brain MRI images, which compromise diagnostic quality, by proposing DIMA, a novel unsupervised framework that uses diffusion models to generate paired datasets for training correction networks, achieving comparable performance to state-of-the-art supervised methods with superior generalizability to clinical data.
Motion artifacts remain a significant challenge in Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), compromising diagnostic quality and potentially leading to misdiagnosis or repeated scans. Existing deep learning approaches for motion artifact correction typically require paired motion-free and motion-affected images for training, which are rarely available in clinical settings. To overcome this requirement, we present DIMA (DIffusing Motion Artifacts), a novel framework that leverages diffusion models to enable unsupervised motion artifact correction in brain MRI. Our two-phase approach first trains a diffusion model on unpaired motion-affected images to learn the distribution of motion artifacts. This model then generates realistic motion artifacts on clean images, creating paired datasets suitable for supervised training of correction networks. Unlike existing methods, DIMA operates without requiring k-space manipulation or detailed knowledge of MRI sequence parameters, making it adaptable across different scanning protocols and hardware. Comprehensive evaluations across multiple datasets and anatomical planes demonstrate that our method achieves comparable performance to state-of-the-art supervised approaches while offering superior generalizability to real clinical data. DIMA represents a significant advancement in making motion artifact correction more accessible for routine clinical use, potentially reducing the need for repeat scans and improving diagnostic accuracy.