As iterative reconstruction in Computed Tomography (CT) is an ill-posed problem, additional prior information has to be used to get a physically meaningful result (close to ground truth if available). However, the amount of influence of the regularisation prior is crucial to the outcome of the reconstruction. Therefore, we propose a scheme for tuning the strength of the prior via a certain image metric. In this work, the parameter is tuned for minimal histogram entropy in selected regions of the reconstruction as histogram entropy is a very basic approach to characterise the information content of data. We performed a sweep over different regularisation parameters showing that the histogram entropy is a suitable metric as it is well behaved over a wide range of parameters. The parameter determination is a feedback loop approach we applied to numerically simulated FORBILD phantom data and verified with an experimental measurement of a micro-CT device. The outcome is evaluated visually and quantitatively by means of root mean squared error (RMSE) and structural similarity (SSIM) for the simulation and visually for the measured sample (no ground truth available). The final reconstructed images exhibit noise-suppressed iterative reconstruction. For both datasets, the optimisation is robust where its initial value is concerned. The parameter tuning approach shows that the proposed metric-driven feedback loop is a promising tool for finding a suitable regularisation parameter in statistical iterative reconstruction.
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As iterative reconstruction in Computed Tomography (CT) is an ill-posed problem, additional prior information has to be used to get a physically meaningful result (close to ground truth if available). However, the amount of influence of the regularisation prior is crucial to the outcome of the reconstruction. Therefore, we propose a scheme for tuning the strength of the prior via a certain image metric. In this work, the parameter is tuned for minimal histogram entropy in selected regions of the...
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