BackProjection - MRC CBU Imaging Wiki

Upload page content

You can upload content for the page named below. If you change the page name, you can also upload content for another page. If the page name is empty, we derive the page name from the file name.

File to load page content from
Page name
Comment
Type the odd letters out: scieNce GATHeRS knowledge fAster tHAN SOCIeTY GATHErS wisdom

location: BackProjection

Back projection reconstruction

Back projection is a simple method of reconstruction for data from PET, SPECT and CT scans.

For PET, for example, the raw data are the number of counts in the detectors. These give the number of gamma rays traveling in a straight line between any two detectors. The simplest way to recover an image corresponding to these data is to first, make an image which covers the space of the inside of the scanner and the position of the detectors, then, for each count (corresponding to a pair of detectors)m draw a line on the image between the position of the two detectors with an intensity proportional to the count. Once this has been done for all pairs of detectors, you will get a rather crude image of whatever was generating the counts inside the scanner.

Here's a more detailed tutorial with some of the processing that can improve this method: http://www.physics.ubc.ca/~mirg/home/tutorial/fbp_recon.html

MatthewBrett