LFC-UNet: learned lossless medical image fast compression with U-Net

In the field of medicine, the rapid advancement of medical technology has significantly increased the speed of medical image generation, compelling us to seek efficient methods for image compression. Neural networks, owing to their outstanding image estimation capabilities, have provided new avenues...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hengrui Liao, Yue Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2024-02-01
Series:PeerJ Computer Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/cs-1924.pdf
Description
Summary:In the field of medicine, the rapid advancement of medical technology has significantly increased the speed of medical image generation, compelling us to seek efficient methods for image compression. Neural networks, owing to their outstanding image estimation capabilities, have provided new avenues for lossless compression. In recent years, learning-based lossless image compression methods, combining neural network predictions with residuals, have achieved performance comparable to traditional non-learning algorithms. However, existing methods have not taken into account that residuals often concentrate excessively, hindering the neural network’s ability to learn accurate residual probability estimation. To address this issue, this study employs a weighted cross-entropy method to handle the imbalance in residual categories. In terms of network architecture, we introduce skip connections from U-Net to better capture image features, thereby obtaining accurate probability estimates. Furthermore, our framework boasts excellent encoding speed, as the model is able to acquire all residuals and residual probabilities in a single inference pass. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art performance on medical datasets while also offering the fastest processing speed. As illustrated by an instance using head CT data, our approach achieves a compression efficiency of 2.30 bits per pixel, with a processing time of only 0.320 seconds per image.
ISSN:2376-5992