Abstract

The purpose of this work is to investigate the feasibility of spatio-temporal generalized Model Observer methods for protocol optimization programs in the field of interventional radiography.Two Model Observers were taken under examination: a Channelized Hotelling Observer with 24 spatio-temporal Gabor channels and a Non Pre-Whitening Model Observer with two different implementations of the spatio-temporal contrast sensitivity function. The images of targets, both stationary and in motion, were acquired in fluoroscopic mode using a CDRAD phantom for signal-present images and an homogenous slab of PMMA for signal-absent ones.After the processing, these images were used to build three series of two alternative forced choice experiments, designed to simulate tasks of clinical interest, and submitted to three human observers in order to set a goal on detectability. A first set of images was used for model tuning and subsequently the verified models were validated throughout a second set of images.Results from the validation phase, for both models, show good agreement with the human observer performances (Root Mean Square Error RMSE ≤ 12%).The tuning phase emerges as a crucial step in building models for angiographic dynamic images; the final agreement underlines the good capability of these spatio-temporal models in simulating human performances, allowing to consider them as a useful and worthwhile tool in protocol optimization when dynamic images are involved.

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