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A Study of Why We Need to Reassess Full Reference Image Quality Assessment with Medical Images.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Image quality assessment (IQA) is indispensable in clinical practice to ensure high standards, as well as in the development stage of machine learning algorithms that operate on medical images. The popular full reference (FR) IQA measures PSNR and SSIM are known and tested for working successfully in many natural imaging tasks, but discrepancies in medical scenarios have been reported in the literature, highlighting the gap between development and actual clinical application. Such inconsistencies are not surprising, as medical images have very different properties than natural images, and PSNR and SSIM have neither been targeted nor properly tested for medical images. This may cause unforeseen problems in clinical applications due to wrong judgement of novel methods. This paper provides a structured and comprehensive overview of examples where PSNR and SSIM prove to be unsuitable for the assessment of novel algorithms using different kinds of medical images, including real-world MRI, CT, OCT, X-Ray, digital pathology and photoacoustic imaging data. Therefore, improvement is urgently needed in particular in this era of AI to increase reliability and explainability in machine learning for medical imaging and beyond. Lastly, we will provide ideas for future research as well as suggest guidelines for the usage of FR-IQA measures applied to medical images.

Description

Journal Title

J Imaging Inform Med

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2948-2925
2948-2933

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Nature

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/N014588/1)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Marie Sk?odowska-Curie actions (777826)
EPSRC (EP/S026045/1)
EPSRC (EP/T017961/1)
EPSRC (EP/T003553/1)
EPSRC (EP/V029428/1)
National Institute for Health and Care Research (IS-BRC-1215-20014)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/W004445/1)