Abstract

Supervised deep learning (SDL) methodology holds promise for accelerated magnetic resonance imaging (AMRI) but is hampered by the reliance on extensive training data. Some self-supervised frameworks, such as deep image prior (DIP), have emerged, eliminating the explicit training procedure but often struggling to remove noise and artifacts under significant degradation. This work introduces a novel self-supervised accelerated parallel MRI approach called PEARL, leveraging a multiple-stream joint deep decoder with two cross-fusion schemes to accurately reconstruct one or more target images from compressively sampled k-space. Each stream comprises cascaded cross-fusion sub-block networks (SBNs) that sequentially perform combined upsampling, 2D convolution, joint attention, ReLU activation and batch normalization (BN). Among them, combined upsampling and joint attention facilitate mutual learning between multiple-stream networks by integrating multi-parameter priors in both additive and multiplicative manners. Long-range unified skip connections within SBNs ensure effective information propagation between distant cross-fusion layers. Additionally, incorporating dual-normalized edge-orientation similarity regularization into the training loss enhances detail reconstruction and prevents overfitting. Experimental results consistently demonstrate that PEARL outperforms the existing state-of-the-art (SOTA) self-supervised AMRI technologies in various MRI cases. Notably, 5-fold ∼6-fold accelerated acquisition yields a 1 % ∼ 2 % improvement in SSIM ROI and a 3 % ∼ 6 % improvement in PSNR ROI, along with a significant 15 % ∼ 20 % reduction in RLNE ROI.

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