Open Access Publications

The Institute's work is published in both traditional journals (e.g. the prestigious imaging journal IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging) and open access journals. For traditional journals, a preprint is uploaded to ArXiv whenever possible to make the research results freely available.

In addition, Tobias Knopp, as Editor-in-Chief, has founded a new scientific Open Access journal, which makes all articles available under the Creative Commons License (CC-BY-4.0). The International Journal on MagneticParticle Imaging (IJMPI) was founded in 2015 and publishes new research developments within the MPI community.

Open Access Publications

[178617]
Title: Joint multi-patch reconstruction: fast and improved results by stochastic optimization.
Written by: L. Zdun, M. Boberg, and C. Brandt
in: <em>International Journal on Magnetic Particle Imaging</em>. (2022).
Volume: <strong>8</strong>. Number: (2),
on pages: 1-8
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DOI: 10.18416/IJMPI.2022.2212002
URL: https://journal.iwmpi.org/index.php/iwmpi/article/view/477
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Note: article, multi-patch, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: In order to measure larger volumes in magnetic particle imaging, it is necessary to divide the region of interest into several patches and measure those patches individually due to a limited size of the field of view. This procedure yields truncation artifacts at the patches boundaries during reconstruction. Applying a regularization which takes into account neighbourhood structures not only on one patch but across all patches can significantly reduce those artifacts. However, the current state-of-the-art reconstruction method using the Kaczmarz algorithm is limited to Tikhonov regularization. We thus propose to use the stochastic primal-dual hybrid gradient method to solve the multi-patch reconstruction task. Our experiments show that the quality of our reconstructions is significantly higher than those obtained by Tikhonov regularization and Kaczmarz method. Moreover, using our proposed method, a joint reconstruction considerably reduces the computational costs compared to multiple single-patch reconstructions. The algorithm proposed is thus competitive to the current state-of-the-art method not only regarding reconstruction quality but also concerning the computational effort.