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Chapter 14 - The Parallel Universe: Parallel Imaging and Novel Acquisition Techniques

from Part II - The Specialist Stuff

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2017

Donald W. McRobbie
Affiliation:
South Australian Medical Imaging, Adelaide, Australia
Elizabeth A. Moore
Affiliation:
Philips Research Laboratories, The Netherlands
Martin J. Graves
Affiliation:
Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge UK
Martin R. Prince
Affiliation:
Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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References

Further Reading

Bernstein, MA, King, KF and Zhou, XJ (2004) Handbook of MRI Pulse Sequences. London: Elsevier Academic Press, chapters 13 and 17.Google Scholar
Brown, RW, Cheng, YCN, Haacke, EM, Thompson, MR and Venkatesan, R (2014) Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Physical Principles and Sequence Design, 2nd edn. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, chapters 14 and 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griswold, MA, Jakob, PM, Heidemann, RM, et al. (2002) ‘Generalised autocalibrating partially parallel acqusitions (GRAPPA)’. Magn Reson Med 47:12021210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lustig, M, Donoho, D and Pauly, JM (2007) ‘Sparse MRI: the application of compressed sensing for rapid MR imaging’. Magn Reson Med 58:11821195.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pruessmann, KP, Weiger, M, Scheidegger, MB and Boesiger, P (1999) ‘SENSE: sensitivity encoding for fast MRI’. Magn Reson Med 42:952962.3.0.CO;2-S>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sodickson, DK and Manning, WJ (1997) ‘Simultaneous acquisition of spatial harmonics (SMASH): fast imaging with radiofrequency coil arrays’. Magn Reson Med 38:591603.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsao, J, Boesiger, P and Pruessman, KP (2003) ‘k-t BLAST and k-t SENSE: dynamic MRI with high frame rate exploiting spatiotemporal correlations’. Magn Reson Med 50:10311042.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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