Channelized Hotelling observer correlation with human observers for low-contrast detection in liver CT images.

channelized Hotelling observers computed tomography image quality liver observer performance

Journal

Journal of medical imaging (Bellingham, Wash.)
ISSN: 2329-4302
Titre abrégé: J Med Imaging (Bellingham)
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101643461

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Apr 2019
Historique:
received: 07 10 2018
accepted: 15 04 2019
entrez: 28 5 2019
pubmed: 28 5 2019
medline: 28 5 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Task-based image quality procedures in CT that substitute a human observer with a model observer usually use single-slice images with uniform backgrounds from homogeneous phantoms. However, anatomical structures and inhomogeneities in organs generate noise that can affect the detection performance of human observers. The purpose of this work was to assess the impact of background type, uniform or liver, and the viewing modality, single- or multislice, on the detection performance of human and model observers. We collected abdominal CT scans from patients and homogeneous phantom scans in which we digitally inserted low-contrast signals that mimicked a liver lesion. We ran a rating experiment with the two background conditions with three signal sizes and three human observers presenting images in two reading modalities: single- and multislice. In addition, channelized Hotelling observers (CHO) for single- and multislice detection were implemented and evaluated according to their degree of correlation with the human observer performance. For human observers, there was a small but significant improvement in performance with multislice compared to the single-slice viewing mode. Our data did not reveal a significant difference between uniform and anatomical backgrounds. Model observers demonstrated a good correlation with human observers for both viewing modalities. Human observers have very similar performances in both multi- and single-slice viewing mode. It is therefore preferable to use single-slice CHO as this model is computationally more tractable than multislice CHO. However, using images from a homogeneous phantom can result in overestimating image quality as CHO performance tends to be higher in uniform than anatomical backgrounds, while human observers have similar detection performances.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31131292
doi: 10.1117/1.JMI.6.2.025501
pii: 18227RR
pmc: PMC6527401
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

025501

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Auteurs

Alexandre Ba (A)

Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Institute of Radiation Physics, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Craig K Abbey (CK)

UC Santa Barbara, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, California, United States.

Damien Racine (D)

Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Institute of Radiation Physics, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Anaïs Viry (A)

Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Institute of Radiation Physics, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Francis R Verdun (FR)

Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Institute of Radiation Physics, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Sabine Schmidt (S)

Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Department of Radiology, Lausanne, Switzerland.

François O Bochud (FO)

Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Institute of Radiation Physics, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Classifications MeSH