Abstract

This study investigated the use of a Vision Transformer (ViT) for reconstructing GABA-edited Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) data from a reduced number of transients. Transients refer to the samples collected during an MRS acquisition by repeating the experiment to generate a signal of sufficient quality. Specifically, 80 transients were used instead of the typical 320 transients, aiming to reduce scan time. The 80 transients were pre-processed and converted into a spectrogram image representation using the Short-Time Fourier Transform (STFT). A pre-trained ViT, named Spectro-ViT, was fine-tuned and then tested using in-vivo GABA-edited MEGA-PRESS data. Its performance was compared against other pipelines in the literature using quantitative quality metrics and estimated metabolite concentration values, with the typical 320-transient scans serving as the reference for comparison. The Spectro-ViT model exhibited the best overall quality metrics among all other pipelines against which it was compared. The metabolite concentrations from Spectro-ViT's reconstructions for GABA+ achieved the best average R2 value of 0.67 and the best average Mean Absolute Percentage Error (MAPE) value of 9.68%, with no significant statistical differences found compared to the 320-transient reference. The code to reproduce this research is available at https://github.com/MICLab-Unicamp/Spectro-ViT

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