Res-MoCoDiff: residual-guided diffusion models for motion artifact correction in brain MRI.
Authors
Affiliations (7)
Affiliations (7)
- Department of Radiation Oncology and Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University, 1365 Clifton Rd NE Building C, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322, UNITED STATES.
- Emory University School of Medicine, 1365 Clifton Rd N E, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322, UNITED STATES.
- Department of Radiation Oncology, Emory University, 1365 CLIFTON RD NE ATLANTA, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322, UNITED STATES.
- Department of Radiology and Sciences Imaging Department of Radiology Oncology, Emory University, 1365 Clifton Rd N E, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322, UNITED STATES.
- Department of Radiology Oncology, Emory University, 1365 Clifton RD NE, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322-1007, UNITED STATES.
- Department of Radiology and Fredrick Philips MR Research Center, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Road, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA, Atlanta, 30322, UNITED STATES.
- Department of Radiology Oncology, Emory University, Clifton Rd, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322-1007, UNITED STATES.
Abstract
Motion artifacts in brain MRI, mainly from rigid head motion, degrade image quality and hinder downstream applications. Conventional methods to mitigate these artifacts, including repeated acquisitions or motion tracking, impose workflow burdens. This study introduces Res-MoCoDiff, an efficient denoising diffusion probabilistic model specifically designed for MRI motion artifact correction. Res-MoCoDiff exploits a novel residual error shifting mechanism during the forward diffusion process to incorporate information from motion-corrupted images. This mechanism allows the model to simulate the evolution of noise with a probability distribution closely matching that of the corrupted data, enabling a reverse diffusion process that requires only four steps. The model employs a U-net backbone, with attention layers replaced by Swin Transformer blocks, to enhance robustness across resolutions. Furthermore, the training process integrates a combined l1+l2 loss function, which promotes image sharpness and reduces pixel-level errors. Res-MoCoDiff was evaluated on both an in-silico dataset generated using a realistic motion simulation framework and an in-vivo MR-ART dataset. Comparative analyses were conducted against established methods, including CycleGAN, Pix2pix, and a diffusion model with a vision transformer backbone (MT-DDPM), using quantitative metrics such as peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), structural similarity index measure (SSIM), and normalized mean squared error (NMSE). The proposed method demonstrated superior performance in removing motion artifacts across minor, moderate, and heavy distortion levels. Res-MoCoDiff consistently achieved the highest SSIM and the lowest NMSE values, with a PSNR of up to 41.91±2.94 dB for minor distortions. Notably, the average sampling time was reduced to 0.37 seconds per batch of two image slices, compared with 101.74 seconds for conventional approaches. Res-MoCoDiff offers a robust and efficient solution for correcting MRI motion artifacts, preserving fine structural details while significantly reducing computational overhead. Its speed and restoration fidelity underscore its potential for integration into clinical workflows, enhancing diagnostic accuracy and patient care.