Abstract

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is a medical indicative test utilized for taking images of the tissue points of interest of the human body. During image acquisition, MRI images can be damaged by many noise signals such as impulse noise. One reason for this noise may be a sharp or sudden disturbance in the image signal. The removal of impulse noise is one of the real difficulties. As of late, numerous image de-noising methods were produced for removing the impulse noise from images. Comparative analysis of known and modern methods of median filter family is presented in this paper. These filters can be categorized as follows: Standard Median Filter; Adaptive Median Filter; Progressive Switching Median Filter; Noise Adaptive Fuzzy Switching Median Filter; and Different Applied Median Filter. The de-noising technique performance for each one is evaluated and compared using Peak Signal Noise Ratio, Structural Similarity index Metric, and Beta metric as quantitative metrics. The experimental results showed that the latest de-noising technique, Different Applied Median Filter (DAMF), produced better results in removing impulse noise compared with the other de-noising techniques. However, this filter produced de-noised image with nonlinear edges in high-density noise. As a result, noise removal from images is one of the low-level images processing which is considered as a first step in many image applications. Therefore, the efficiency of any image processed depends on the efficiency of noise removal technique.

Highlights

  • Magnetic resonance images show the tissue and organ images of the body of human with exceptionally precise points of interest

  • 1, Table-2, and Table-3 show the values of PSNR, SSIM, and Beta metric ( ) for measurement of the effectiveness of each filter from median filter family (SMF, Adaptive Median Filter (AMF), Progressive Switching Median Filter (PSMF), Noise Adaptive Fuzzy Switching Median Filter (NAFSMF), and Different Applied Median Filter (DAMF))

  • Figure-4 shows the noisy images for Img2 and the results of de-noising methods based on median filter

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Magnetic resonance images show the tissue and organ images of the body of human with exceptionally precise points of interest. These images can be degraded by noise during the capturing process and transmission. In this case, the MRI image quality is very important in the precision of clinical analysis. At the point when images are recorded and transmitted fastly, a few pixels are composed arbitrarily as white and dark pixels. This noise is named Salt and pepper noise [2, 3]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call