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Hermitian Symmetry
 
The symmetry in k-space is a fundamental property of Fourier transformations. For a two-dimensional example, let g(x,y) be a complex function, i.e. the value of g at any (x,y) is a complex number. If nothing is known about the function g, data throughout all of k-space is needed to fully characterize it.
If the function g is 'real', meaning that at every (x,y) the imaginary component of g(x,y) is zero, then you only need half as much data to characterize g. The result is redundancy between the data on one half of k-space and the other. Specifically, if G(kx,ky) is the Fourier transformation of g(x,y), and g(x,y) is real, then G(kx,ky)=G*(- kx,- ky), where * indicates a complex conjugate. The data in mirrored positions in k-space, i.e. (kx,ky) versus (- kx,- ky), are conjugates of each other.

See Imaginary Numbers and Complex Conjugate.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Echo-planar imaging (EPI) and functional MRI(.pdf)
1998   by www.uib.no    
MRI Resources 
Online Books - MRI Technician and Technologist Career - Education - Coils - Safety Products - Guidance
 
K-SpaceForum -
related threads
 
The k-space is an extension of the concept of Fourier space that is well known in imaging. In MR imaging the k-space is a temporary memory of the spatial frequency information in two or three dimensions of an object; the k-space is defined by the space covered by the phase and frequency encoding data.
The relation between K-space data and image data is the Fourier Transformation. The data acquisition matrix contains raw image data before the image processing. In 2 dimensional Fourier transformation imaging, a line of data corresponds to the digitized MRI signal at a particular phase encoding level. The position in k-space is directly related to the gradient across the object being imaged. By changing the gradient over time, the k-space data are sampled in a trajectory through Fourier space at each point until it is filled.

See also Spatial Frequency and Raw Data.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
K-space formulation of MRI
Tuesday, 22 March 2005   by www.ebyte.it    
The Basics of MRI
   by www.cis.rit.edu    
  News & More:
Optimal k-Space Sampling for Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI with an Application to MR Renography
Thursday, 5 November 2009   by www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov    
MRI Resources 
Fluorescence - Most Wanted - Safety pool - Stimulator pool - Software - Mobile MRI
 
Aliasing ArtifactInfoSheet: - Artifacts - 
Case Studies, 
Reduction Index, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Artifacts -
 
Quick Overview
Please note that there are different common names for this MRI artifact.
Artifact Information
NAME
Aliasing, backfolding, foldover, phase wrapping, wrap around
DESCRIPTION
Image wrap around
Aliasing is an artifact that occurs in MR images when the scanned body part is larger than field of view (FOV). As a consequence of the acquired k-space frequencies not being sampled densely enough, whereby portions of the object outside of the desired FOV get mapped to an incorrect location inside the FOV. The cyclical property of the Fourier transform fills the missing data of the right side with data from behind the FOV of the left side and vice versa. This is caused by a too small number of samples acquired in, e.g. the frequency encoding direction, therefore the spectrums will overlap, resulting in a replication of the object in the x direction.
Aliasing in the frequency direction can be eliminated by twice as fast sampling of the signal or by applying frequency specific filters to the received signal.
A similar problem occurs in the phase encoding direction, where the phases of signal-bearing tissues outside of the FOV in the y-direction are a replication of the phases that are encoded within the FOV. Phase encoding gradients are scaled for the field of view only, therefore tissues outside the FOV do not get properly phase encoded relative to their actual position and 'wraps' into the opposite side of the image.
mri safety guidance
Image Guidance
Use a larger FOV, RFOV or 3D Volume, apply presaturation pulses to the undesired tissue, adjust the position of the FOV, or select a small coil which will only receive signal from objects inside or near the coil. The number of phase encoding steps must be increased in phase direction, unfortunately resulting in longer scan times.
When this is not possible it can be corrected by oversampling the data. Aliasing is eliminated by Oversampling in frequency direction. No Phase Wrap (Foldover Suppression) options typically correct the phase encoding by doubling the field of view, doubling the number of phase encodes (to keep resolution constant) and halving the number of averages (to keep scan time constant) then discarding the additional data and processing the image within the desired field of view (but this is more time consuming).
Tissue outside this doubled area can be folded nevertheless into the image as phase wrap. In this case combine more than 2 number of excitations / number of signal averages with foldover suppression.
See also Aliasing, Foldover Suppression, Oversampling, and Artifact Reduction - Aliasing.
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Array Processor
 
Optional component of the computer system used to perform Fourier transformations to accelerate the processing of the received numerical data relative to the MR imaging process, to speed them up.
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MRI Resources 
Services and Supplies - Pacemaker - Corporations - Pathology - Bioinformatics - Contrast Enhanced MRI
 
Back Projection Imaging
 
This imaging technique is probably the earliest, but rarely used today. Most of today's imaging techniques are based on the Fourier transform, and fill the Cartesian grid of points in k-space line by line by a sequence of applied gradients. Back projection imaging performs a radial filling of the k-space by a one dimensional field gradient, applied at different angles. Back projection imaging is still in use in laser polarized noble gas imaging (see ventilation agents and lung imaging).
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Primer on Magentic Resonance Imaging Tomography
   by research.physics.lsa.umich.edu    
The Basics of MRI
   by www.cis.rit.edu    
MRI Resources 
Mobile MRI - MR Guided Interventions - NMR - PACS - Pediatric and Fetal MRI - Education pool
 
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