Fast MRI for All: Bridging Access Gaps by Training without Raw Data

Published: 18 Sept 2025, Last Modified: 29 Oct 2025NeurIPS 2025 spotlightEveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Keywords: Computational Imaging, Fast MRI, Unsupervised Learning, Compressed Sensing, Deep Learning, Access
TL;DR: Training PD-DL reconstruction from routine clinical images without raw data to improve fast MRI access
Abstract: Physics-driven deep learning (PD-DL) approaches have become popular for improved reconstruction of fast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. Though PD-DL offers higher acceleration rates than existing clinical fast MRI techniques, their use has been limited outside specialized MRI centers. A key challenge is generalization to rare pathologies or different populations, noted in multiple studies, with fine-tuning on target populations suggested for improvement. However, current approaches for PD-DL training require access to raw k-space measurements, which is typically only available at specialized MRI centers that have research agreements for such data access. This is especially an issue for rural and under-resourced areas, where commercial MRI scanners only provide access to a final reconstructed image. To tackle these challenges, we propose Compressibility-inspired Unsupervised Learning via Parallel Imaging Fidelity (CUPID) for high-quality PD-DL training using only routine clinical reconstructed images exported from an MRI scanner. CUPID evaluates output quality with a compressibility-based approach while ensuring that the output stays consistent with the clinical parallel imaging reconstruction through well-designed perturbations. Our results show CUPID achieves similar quality to established PD-DL training that requires k-space data while outperforming compressed sensing (CS) and diffusion-based generative methods. We further demonstrate its effectiveness in a zero-shot training setup for retrospectively and prospectively sub-sampled acquisitions, attesting to its minimal training burden. As an approach that radically deviates from existing strategies, CUPID presents an opportunity to provide broader access to fast MRI for remote and rural populations in an attempt to reduce the obstacles associated with this expensive imaging modality. Code is available at https://github.com/ualcalar17/CUPID.
Primary Area: Machine learning for sciences (e.g. climate, health, life sciences, physics, social sciences)
Submission Number: 26907
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