Abstract

BackgroundThe perceptual quality of magnetic resonance (MR) images influences diagnosis and may compromise the treatment. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how the image quality changes influence the interobserver variability of their assessment.MethodsFor the variability evaluation, a dataset containing distorted MRI images was prepared and then assessed by 31 experienced medical professionals (radiologists). Differences between observers were analyzed using the Fleiss’ kappa. However, since the kappa evaluates the agreement among radiologists taking into account aggregated decisions, a typically employed criterion of the image quality assessment (IQA) performance was used to provide a more thorough analysis. The IQA performance of radiologists was evaluated by comparing the Spearman correlation coefficients, ρ, between individual scores with the mean opinion scores (MOS) composed of the subjective opinions of the remaining professionals.ResultsThe experiments show that there is a significant agreement among radiologists (κ=0.12; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.118, 0.121; P<0.001) on the quality of the assessed images. The resulted κ is strongly affected by the subjectivity of the assigned scores, separately presenting close scores. Therefore, the ρ was used to identify poor performance cases and to confirm the consistency of the majority of collected scores (ρmean = 0.5706). The results for interns (ρmean = 0.6868) supports the finding that the quality assessment of MR images can be successfully taught.ConclusionsThe agreement observed among radiologists from different imaging centers confirms the subjectivity of the perception of MR images. It was shown that the image content and severity of distortions affect the IQA. Furthermore, the study highlights the importance of the psychosomatic condition of the observers and their attitude.

Highlights

  • The perceptual quality of magnetic resonance (MR) images influences diagnosis and may compromise the treatment

  • This study aims at the assessment of a representative group of radiologists in the quality evaluation of MR images

  • Since the quality perception of radiological images and its relationship with the diagnostic image assessment is seldom addressed in the literature, in this paper, the agreement among professionals on the quality of MR images is studied

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Summary

Introduction

The perceptual quality of magnetic resonance (MR) images influences diagnosis and may compromise the treatment. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how the image quality changes influence the interobserver variability of their assessment. The perception of pathologies in the displayed medical resonance (MR) images is often subjective and may lead to false-negative errors [22, 24]. Obuchowicz et al BMC Medical Imaging (2020) 20:109 ical and pathological structures [15, 35]. Such conditions cannot be met in practice. To facilitate image interpretation and improve diagnostic performance, display hardware, viewing software, and reading environment are provided in a radiology reading room [17, 41, 44]

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