scholarly journals On identity testing of tensors, low-rank recovery and compressed sensing

Author(s):  
Michael A. Forbes ◽  
Amir Shpilka
Author(s):  
Mei Sun ◽  
Jinxu Tao ◽  
Zhongfu Ye ◽  
Bensheng Qiu ◽  
Jinzhang Xu ◽  
...  

Background: In order to overcome the limitation of long scanning time, compressive sensing (CS) technology exploits the sparsity of image in some transform domain to reduce the amount of acquired data. Therefore, CS has been widely used in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reconstruction. </P><P> Discussion: Blind compressed sensing enables to recover the image successfully from highly under- sampled measurements, because of the data-driven adaption of the unknown transform basis priori. Moreover, analysis-based blind compressed sensing often leads to more efficient signal reconstruction with less time than synthesis-based blind compressed sensing. Recently, some experiments have shown that nonlocal low-rank property has the ability to preserve the details of the image for MRI reconstruction. Methods: Here, we focus on analysis-based blind compressed sensing, and combine it with additional nonlocal low-rank constraint to achieve better MR images from fewer measurements. Instead of nuclear norm, we exploit non-convex Schatten p-functionals for the rank approximation. </P><P> Results & Conclusion: Simulation results indicate that the proposed approach performs better than the previous state-of-the-art algorithms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-180
Author(s):  
Eric Lybrand ◽  
Rayan Saab

Abstract We study Sigma–Delta $(\varSigma\!\varDelta) $ quantization methods coupled with appropriate reconstruction algorithms for digitizing randomly sampled low-rank matrices. We show that the reconstruction error associated with our methods decays polynomially with the oversampling factor, and we leverage our results to obtain root-exponential accuracy by optimizing over the choice of quantization scheme. Additionally, we show that a random encoding scheme, applied to the quantized measurements, yields a near-optimal exponential bit rate. As an added benefit, our schemes are robust both to noise and to deviations from the low-rank assumption. In short, we provide a full generalization of analogous results, obtained in the classical setup of band-limited function acquisition, and more recently, in the finite frame and compressed sensing setups to the case of low-rank matrices sampled with sub-Gaussian linear operators. Finally, we believe our techniques for generalizing results from the compressed sensing setup to the analogous low-rank matrix setup is applicable to other quantization schemes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marius Junge ◽  
Kiryung Lee

Abstract The restricted isometry property (RIP) is an integral tool in the analysis of various inverse problems with sparsity models. Motivated by the applications of compressed sensing and dimensionality reduction of low-rank tensors, we propose generalized notions of sparsity and provide a unified framework for the corresponding RIP, in particular when combined with isotropic group actions. Our results extend an approach by Rudelson and Vershynin to a much broader context including commutative and non-commutative function spaces. Moreover, our Banach space notion of sparsity applies to affine group actions. The generalized approach in particular applies to high-order tensor products.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antoine Klauser ◽  
Bernhard Strasser ◽  
Bijaya Thapa ◽  
Francois Lazeyras ◽  
Ovidiu Andronesi

Low sensitivity MR techniques such as magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) greatly benefit from the gain in signal-to-noise (SNR) provided by ultra-high field MR. High-resolution and whole-brain slab MRSI remains however very challenging due to lengthy acquisition, low signal, lipid contamination and field inhomogeneity. In this study, we propose an acquisition-reconstruction scheme that combines a 1H-FID-MRSI sequence with compressed sensing acceleration and low-rank modeling with total-generalized-variation constraint to achieve metabolite imaging in two and three dimensions at 7 Tesla. The resulting images and volumes reveal highly detailed distributions that are specific to each metabolite and follow the underlying brain anatomy. The MRSI method was validated in a high-resolution phantom containing fine metabolite structures, and in 3 healthy volunteers. This new application of compressed sensing acceleration paves the way for high-resolution MRSI in clinical setting with acquisition times of 5 min for 2D MRSI at 2.5 mm and of 20 min for 3D MRSI at 3.3 mm isotropic.


2018 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 1475-1491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcelo V.W. Zibetti ◽  
Azadeh Sharafi ◽  
Ricardo Otazo ◽  
Ravinder R. Regatte

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