Leveraging Spatial Uncertainty for Online Error Compensation in EMT

Bibliographic Details
Title: Leveraging Spatial Uncertainty for Online Error Compensation in EMT
Authors: Krumb, Henry, Hofmann, Sofie, Kügler, David, Ghazy, Ahmed, Dorweiler, Bernhard, Schmitt, Robert, Sakas, Georgios, Mukhopadhyay, Anirban
Publication Year: 2020
Subject Terms: Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing, Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing
More Details: Purpose: Electromagnetic Tracking (EMT) can potentially complement fluoroscopic navigation, reducing radiation exposure in a hybrid setting. Due to the susceptibility to external distortions, systematic error in EMT needs to be compensated algorithmically. Compensation algorithms for EMT in guidewire procedures are only practical in an online setting. Methods: We collect positional data and train a symmetric Artificial Neural Network (ANN) architecture for compensating navigation error. The results are evaluated in both online and offline scenarios and are compared to polynomial fits. We assess spatial uncertainty of the compensation proposed by the ANN. Simulations based on real data show how this uncertainty measure can be utilized to improve accuracy and limit radiation exposure in hybrid navigation. Results: ANNs compensate unseen distortions by more than 70%, outperforming polynomial regression. Working on known distortions, ANNs outperform polynomials as well. We empirically demonstrate a linear relationship between tracking accuracy and model uncertainty. The effectiveness of hybrid tracking is shown in a simulation experiment. Conclusion: ANNs are suitable for EMT error compensation and can generalize across unseen distortions. Model uncertainty needs to be assessed when spatial error compensation algorithms are developed, so that training data collection can be optimized. Finally, we find that error compensation in EMT reduces the need for x-ray images in hybrid navigation.
Document Type: Working Paper
DOI: 10.1007/s11548-020-02189-w
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2004.13331
Accession Number: edsarx.2004.13331
Database: arXiv
More Details
DOI:10.1007/s11548-020-02189-w