A Constrained Genetic Algorithm with Adaptively Defined Fitness Function in MRS Quantification

被引:0
作者
Papakostas, G. A. [1 ]
Karras, D. A. [2 ]
Mertzios, B. G. [1 ]
Graveron-Demilly, D. [3 ]
Van Ormondt, D. [4 ]
机构
[1] Democritus Univ Thrace DUTH, Dept Elect & Comp Engn, Xanthi, Greece
[2] Chalkis Inst Technol, Automat Dept, Psachna 34400, Evoia, Greece
[3] Univ Claude Bernard Lyon1, INSERM U630, CNRSUMR 5220, UMR 5220,Lab Creatis LRMN, Villeurbanne, France
[4] Delft Univ Technol, Appl Phys, Lorentzweg 1, NL-2628 CJ Delft, Netherlands
来源
GRID AND DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING, CONTROL AND AUTOMATION | 2010年 / 121卷
关键词
MRSI; metabolites quantification; genetic algorithms; MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-SPECTROSCOPY; HUMAN BRAIN-METABOLITES; NEURAL-NETWORK ANALYSIS; SPECTRA;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
MRS Signal quantification is a rather involved procedure and has attracted the interest of the medical engineering community, regarding the development of computationally efficient methodologies. Significant contributions based on Computational Intelligence tools, such as Neural Networks (NNs), demonstrated a good performance but not without drawbacks already discussed by the authors. On the other hand preliminary application of Genetic Algorithms (GA) has already been reported in the literature by the authors regarding the peak detection problem encountered in MRS quantification using the Voigt line shape model. This paper investigates a novel constrained genetic algorithm involving a generic and adaptively defined fitness function which extends the simple genetic algorithm methodology in case of noisy signals. The applicability of this new algorithm is scrutinized through experimentation in artificial MRS signals interleaved with noise, regarding its signal fitting capabilities. Although extensive experiments with real world MRS signals are necessary, the herein shown performance illustrates the method's potential to be established as a generic MRS metabolites quantification procedure.
引用
收藏
页码:257 / +
页数:3
相关论文
共 7 条
[1]   Applications of neural network analyses to in vivo 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy of Parkinson disease patients [J].
Axelson, D ;
Bakken, IJ ;
Gribbestad, IS ;
Ehrnholm, B ;
Nilsen, G ;
Aasly, J .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2002, 16 (01) :13-20
[2]   Applications of neural network analyses to in vivo 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy of epilepsy patients [J].
Bakken, IJ ;
Axelson, D ;
Kvistad, KA ;
Brodtkorb, E ;
Müller, B ;
Aasly, J ;
Gribbestad, IS .
EPILEPSY RESEARCH, 1999, 35 (03) :245-252
[3]   Fast quantification of proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging with artificial neural networks [J].
Bhat, Himanshu ;
Sajja, Balasrinivasa Rao ;
Narayana, Ponnada A. .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 2006, 183 (01) :110-122
[4]  
EASON G, 2001, NMR BIOMED, V14, P247
[5]   Quantification of human brain metabolites from in vivo 1H NMR magnitude spectra using automated artificial neural network analysis [J].
Hiltunen, Y ;
Kaartinen, J ;
Pulkkinen, J ;
Häkkinen, AM ;
Lundbom, N ;
Kauppinen, RA .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 2002, 154 (01) :1-5
[6]   Automated quantification of human brain metabolites by artificial neural network analysis from in vivo single-voxel 1H NMR spectra [J].
Kaartinen, J ;
Mierisova, S ;
Oja, JME ;
Usenius, JP ;
Kauppinen, RA ;
Hiltunen, Y .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 1998, 134 (01) :176-179
[7]   Dealing With Peaks Overlapping Issue in Quantifying Metabolites in MRSI [J].
Papakostas, G. A. ;
Karras, D. A. ;
Mertzios, B. G. .
IST: 2009 IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON IMAGING SYSTEMS AND TECHNIQUES, 2009, :58-+