A fast and effective denoising solution using deep learning for real time X-ray Acoustic Computed Tomography
ORAL
Abstract
The X-ray acoustic (XA) computed tomography has recently been proposed as a method for real-time 3D in-vivo patient dosimetry for radiation therapy. The XA effect follows the same principles as the photoacoustic effect: acoustic waves are induced due to the absorption of heat energy by the tissue from a pulsed photon beam. XA signals are small in amplitude and suffer from interference from RF noise generated by the Linear Accelerator electronics. For a real time dose reconstruction, a fast and effective denoising solution is required to increase the signal to noise in the measured XA signals. Here, we present a method to denoise the XA signals using deep learning neural networks. A Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) that operates on the spectral domain of XA signals is used. Given a noisy XA spectrogram, the CNN predicts clean XA signals. An advanced numerical model for time domain propagation of XA waves (kWave) is used to generate the training data for the CNN. Theoretical and experimental clean and noisy XA signals are obtained by megavoltage energy X-rays with long pulse width (4 us) generated from a clinical linear accelerator.
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Presenters
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David Thomas
Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado, Denver
Authors
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David Thomas
Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado, Denver
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Farnoush Forghani
Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado, Denver
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Adam Mahl
Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado, Denver
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Bernard Jones
Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado, Denver
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Mark Borden
University of Colorado, Boulder, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder
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Moyed Miften
Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado, Denver