Abstract

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) has been utilized broadly for clinical purposes to portray human anatomy due to its non-intrusive nature. The information acquisition method in MRI naturally picks up encoded signals (Fourier transformed) instead of pixel values and is called k-space information. Sparse reconstruction techniques can be executed in MRI for producing an image from fewer measurements. Compressive sensing (CS) technique samples the signals at a rate lower than traditional Nyquist’s rate and thereby reduces the data acquisition time in MRI. This paper investigates a new proposed sampling scheme along with radial sampling and 1D Cartesian variable density sampling. For various sampling percentages, subjective and quantitative analyses are carried out on the reconstructed Magnetic Resonance image. Experimental results depicts that the high sampling density near the center of k-space gives a better reconstruction of compressing sensing MRI.

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