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1.
Front Psychol ; 15: 1428075, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39006544

RESUMO

Once a mass health crisis breaks out, it causes concern among whole societies. Thus, understanding the individual's behavior in response to such events is key in government crisis management. From the perspective of social influence theory, this study adopts the empirical research method to collect data information in February 2020 through online survey, with a view to comprehensively describe the individuals'conformity behavior during the COVID-19 outbreak in China. The individual's conformity behavior and new influencing factors were identified. The results revealed that affective risk perception, cognitive risk perception, and individual risk knowledge had a positive significant impact on normative influence. Affective risk perception and individual risk knowledge had a positive significant on informative influence. Cognitive risk perception did not significantly impact informative influence. Informative influence and normative influence had a positive effect on conformity behavior. These results have significant implications for the management behavior of the government.

2.
Med Phys ; 2024 Jun 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38828883

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The back-projection strategies such as confidence weighting (CW) and most likely annihilation position (MLAP) have been adopted into back-projection-and-filtering-like (BPF-like) deep reconstruction model and shown great potential on fast and accurate PET reconstruction. Although the two methods degenerate to an identical model at the time resolution of 0 ps, they represent two distinct approaches at the realistic time resolutions of current commercial systems. There is a lack of a systematic and fair assessment on these differences. PURPOSE: This work aims to analyze the impact of back-projection variants on CNN-based PET image reconstruction to find the most effective back-projection model, and ultimately contribute to accurate PET reconstruction. METHODS: Different back-projection strategies (CW and MLAP) and different angular view processing methods (view-summed and view-grouped) were considered, leading to the comparison of four back-projection variants integrated with the same CNN filtration model. Meanwhile, we investigated two strategies of physical effect compensation, either introducing pre-corrected data as the input or adding a channel of attenuation map to the CNN model. After training models separately on Monte-Carlo-simulated BrainWeb phantoms with full dose (events = 3×107), we tested them on both simulated phantoms and clinical brain scans with two dosage levels. For the performance assessment, peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and root mean square error (RMSE) were used to evaluate the pixel-wise error, structural similarity index (SSIM) to evaluate the structural similarity, and contrast recovery coefficient (CRC) in manually selected ROI to compare the region recovery. RESULTS: Compared to two MLAP-based histo-image reconstruction models, two CW-based back-projected image methods produced clearer, sharper, and more detailed images, from both simulated and clinical data. For angular view processing methods, view-grouped histo-image improved image quality, while view-grouped cwbp-image showed no advantage except for contrast recovery. Quantitative analysis on simulated data demonstrated that the view-summed cwbp-image model achieved the best PSNR, RMSE, SSIM, while the 8-view cwbp-image model achieved the best CRC in lesions and the white matter. Additionally, the multi-channel input model including the back-projection image and attenuation map was proved to be the most efficient and simplest method for compensating for physical effects for brain data. Applying Gaussian blur to the histo-image yielded images with limited improvement. All above results hold for both the half-dose and the full-dose cases. CONCLUSION: For brain imaging, the evaluation based on metrics PSNR, RMSE, SSIM, and CRC indicates that the view-summed CW-based back-projection variant is the most effective input for the BPF-like reconstruction model using CNN filtration, which can involve the attenuation map through an additional channel to effectively compensate for physical effects.

3.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; PP2024 Aug 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39106129

RESUMO

This work demonstrates the feasibility of two-orthogonal-projection-based CBCT (2V-CBCT) reconstruction and dose calculation for radiation therapy (RT) using real projection data, which is the first 2V-CBCT feasibility study with real projection data, to the best of our knowledge. RT treatments are often delivered in multiple fractions, for which on-board CBCT is desirable to calculate the delivered dose per fraction for the purpose of RT delivery quality assurance and adaptive RT. However, not all RT treatments/fractions have CBCT acquired, but two orthogonal projections are always available. The question to be addressed in this work is the feasibility of 2V-CBCT for the purpose of RT dose calculation. 2V-CBCT is a severely ill-posed inverse problem for which we propose a coarse-to-fine learning strategy. First, a 3D deep neural network that can extract and exploit the inter-slice and intra-slice information is adopted to predict the initial 3D volumes. Then, a 2D deep neural network is utilized to fine-tune the initial 3D volumes slice-by-slice. During the fine-tuning stage, a perceptual loss based on multi-frequency features is employed to enhance the image reconstruction. Dose calculation results from both photon and proton RT demonstrate that 2V-CBCT provides comparable accuracy with full-view CBCT based on real projection data.

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