HopkinsMedStudent said:
Are you trying to suggest that radiologists routinely misinterpret CT scans?
I have no idea.
Are you saying that it is necessary to claim that radiologists routinely misinterpret CT scans in order to demonstrate that there is a source of error that they should be aware of?
Thats a critique of computer scientists, not doctors. Doctors dont develop the technology, they just look for applications. Your gripe is with teh computer scientists.
Not really, but thank you for giving me an opportunity to talk about what I omitted from the earlier posting.
Computer scientists have far better ways of dealing with the uncertainties of sampling; these go under the heading of "volume visualization." The best algorithms are the COD algorithms, although sometimes the D is omitted to accomodate current graphics hardware. These images are
accurate. However, the way in which they are accurate is that, when the resolution of structures is mathematically undiscernable, those structures appear blurry.
I have found empirically, from working with radiologists, that the vast majority will simply not accept an image from a computer calculation that does not look clear and focused.
I've also found empirically that they demand to have
a number for, say, the volume of an intestinal polyp. Even though it is possible to generate a minimum and maximum size, given the mathematical constraints, they don't want to hear about it.
Perhaps this will change at some point in the future, twenty years down the line, but I don't see it happening now. I'm talking about it now in the (possibly vain) hope that some of the med students here will eventually graduate with some understanding of the vagueries of generating a complete picture from sampled data.
This does not seem to be happening. What I see is a lot of defensiveness and hostility.
Again, your criticism is not with the doctors, its with the engineers/manufacturer who designed the protocol. Doctors (the vast majority anyways) dont design protocols, they just use built in "recipes" supplied by the manufacturer.
See above. I've tried, very hard, in an academic research setting that involved working with radiologists, to convey that volume visualization is a better way of approaching this problem. As of 1996 or so, which is the last time I did this, I didn't see any acceptance.
Radiologists dont need to know Nyquist to be able to recognize MR image problems. All they have to do is set the FOV larger than the object. As long as they do that, there is no Nyquist violation.
This is such an eye-watering misunderstanding of the problem that I don't even know what to say. I'm just boggled.