Abstract

Sparse matrix beamforming (SMB) is a computationally efficient reformulation of delay-and-sum (DAS) beamforming as a single sparse matrix multiplication. This reformulation can potentially dovetail with machine learning platforms like TensorFlow and PyTorch that already support sparse matrix operations. In this work, using SMB principles, we present the development of beamforming-integrated neural networks (BINNs) that can rationally infer ultrasound images directly from pre-beamforming channel-domain radiofrequency (RF) datasets. To demonstrate feasibility, a toy BINN was first designed with two 2D-convolution layers that were respectively placed both before and after an SMB layer. This toy BINN correctly updated kernel weights in all convolution layers, demonstrating efficiency in both training (PyTorch – 133 ms, TensorFlow – 22 ms) and inference (PyTorch – 4 ms, TensorFlow – 5 ms). As an application demonstration, another BINN with two RF-domain convolution layers, an SMB layer, and three image-domain convolution layers was designed to infer high-quality B-mode images in vivo from single-shot plane-wave channel RF data. When trained using 31-angle compounded plane wave images (3000 frames from 22 human volunteers), this BINN showed mean-square logarithmic error improvements of 21.3 % and 431 % in the inferred B-mode image quality respectively comparing to an image-to-image convolutional neural network (CNN) and an RF-to-image CNN with the same number of layers and learnable parameters (3,777). Overall, by including an SMB layer to adopt prior knowledge of DAS beamforming, BINN shows potential as a new type of informed machine learning framework for ultrasound imaging.

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