New developments have been made in several fields, including medical imaging, thanks to recent advancements in generative artificial intelligence. These generative models have great promise for a wide variety of uses, including but not limited to anomaly detection, image-to-image translation, denoising, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reconstruction. However, these models are notoriously complex, making it tough to put into practice and reproduce. This intricacy can slow progress, create barriers to entry for users, and discourage the evaluation of novel approaches compared to established practices.
To make building and deploying generative models easier and more standardized, the researchers team created an open-source platform called MONAI Generative Models. This group included researchers from King’s College London, the National Institute of Mental Health, The University of Edinburgh, the University of Basel, Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology, NVIDIA, Stanford University, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and University College London.
Five studies covering a wide range of medical imaging-related topics, from out-of-distribution detection to image translation and superresolution, are discussed to demonstrate the efficacy of the technology. The platform’s adaptability, shown by its use with various modalities and anatomical regions in 2D and 3D scenarios, demonstrates its potential as a novel tool for furthering medical imaging. The five experiments are as follows:
The proposed models may easily be adjusted to fit new circumstances, allowing for more thorough comparisons across a wide range of situations and broadening their initial purview. To demonstrate this quality, the researchers evaluated the Latent Diffusion Model, one of the state-of-the-art models in their package, and its ability to generate new information from various datasets that included subjects with varying body types and activity types.
The latent generative models include two basic parts—a compression model and a generating model—and the team shows that these are very flexible.
This system makes it easier to put generative models to use in various medical imaging applications. The team demonstrated that they can be applied to detecting 3D imaging data that falls outside the norm.
Using the Stable Diffusion 2.0 Upscaler method, they also investigated the potential of generative models for superresolution. Findings show that generative models are useful for superresolution applications, especially 3D models.
The team also tested how well their model worked with superresolution photos. To do this, they compared the upscaled test set photos to their corresponding ground truth images. These measures confirm the superior superresolution powers of the model, proving its efficiency in improving image clarity.
In the future, the researchers plan to improve support for other applications like MRI reconstruction and incorporate more recent models to make model comparison easier. The field of medical generative models and its applications will continue to advance thanks to these developments.
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New developments have been made in several fields, including medical imaging, thanks to recent advancements in generative artificial intelligence. These generative models have great promise for a wide variety of uses, including but not limited to anomaly detection, image-to-image translation, denoising, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reconstruction. However, these models are notoriously complex, making it
The post A New AI Research Introduces MONAI Generative Models: An Open-Source Platform that Allows Researchers and Developers to Easily Train, Evaluate, and Deploy Generative Models appeared first on MarkTechPost. Read More AI Shorts, Applications, Artificial Intelligence, Editors Pick, Generative AI, Machine Learning, Staff, Tech News, Technology, Uncategorized