You are currently on the new version of our website. Access the old version .

Journal of Imaging

Journal of Imaging is an international, multi/interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed, open access journal of imaging techniques, published online monthly by MDPI.

Indexed in PubMed | Quartile Ranking JCR - Q2 (Imaging Science and Photographic Technology)

All Articles (2,236)

Cross-scene hyperspectral image (HSI) classification under single-source domain generalization (DG) is a crucial yet challenging task in remote sensing. The core difficulty lies in generalizing from a limited source domain to unseen target scenes. We formalize this through the causal theory, where different sensing scenes are viewed as distinct interventions on a shared physical system. This perspective reveals two fundamental obstacles: interventional distribution shifts arising from varying acquisition conditions, and confounding biases induced by spurious correlations driven by domain-specific factors. Taking the above considerations into account, we propose CauseHSI, a causality-inspired framework that offers new insights into cross-scene HSI classification. CauseHSI consists of two key components: a Counterfactual Generation Module (CGM) that perturbs domain-specific factors to generate diverse counterfactual variants, simulating cross-domain interventions while preserving semantic consistency, and a Causal Disentanglement Module (CDM) that separates invariant causal semantics from spurious correlations through structured constraints under a structural causal model, ultimately guiding the model to focus on domain-invariant and generalizable representations. By aligning model learning with causal principles, CauseHSI enhances robustness against domain shifts. Extensive experiments on the Pavia, Houston, and HyRANK datasets demonstrate that CauseHSI outperforms existing DG methods.

26 January 2026

(a) SCM of the image generation process. Z, S, X and Y denote the latent physical properties, sensing scene, observed image, and semantic label, respectively. (b) Illustration of representation disentanglement. 
  
    X
    c
  
 and 
  
    X
    n
  
 denote the causal features and non-causal features, respectively.

Children with rare tumours and malformations may benefit from innovative imaging, including patient-specific 3D models that can enhance communication and surgical planning. The primary aim was to evaluate the impact of patient-specific 3D models on communication with families. The secondary aims were to assess their influence on medical management and to establish an efficient post-processing workflow. From 2021 to 2024, we prospectively included patients aged 3 months to 18 years with rare tumours or malformations. Families completed questionnaires before and after the presentation of a 3D model generated from MRI sequences, including peripheral nerve tractography. Treating physicians completed a separate questionnaire before surgical planning. Analyses were performed in R. Among 21 patients, diagnoses included 11 tumours, 8 malformations, 1 trauma, and 1 pancreatic pseudo-cyst. Likert scale responses showed improved family understanding after viewing the 3D model (mean score 3.94 to 4.67) and a high overall evaluation (mean 4.61). Physicians also rated the models positively. An efficient image post-processing workflow was defined. Although manual 3D reconstruction remains time-consuming, these preliminary results show that colourful, patient-specific 3D models substantially improve family communication and support clinical decision-making. They also highlight the need for supporting the development of MRI-based automated segmentation softwares using deep neural networks, which are clinically approved and usable in routine practice.

26 January 2026

Ratings from patients before and after 3D model presentation.

Similarity search on image embeddings is a common practice for image retrieval in machine learning and pattern recognition systems. Approximate nearest neighbor (ANN) methods enable scalable similarity search on large datasets, often approaching sub-linear complexity. Yet, little empirical work has examined how ANN neighborhood geometry differs from that of exact k-nearest neighbors (k-NN) search as the neighborhood size increases under constrained search effort. This study quantifies how approximate neighborhood structure changes relative to exact k-NN search as k increases across three experimental conditions. Using multiple random subsets of 10,000 images drawn from the STL-10 dataset, we compute ResNet-50 image embeddings, perform an exact k-NN search, and compare it to a Hierarchical Navigable Small World (HNSW)-based ANN search under controlled hyperparameter regimes. We evaluated the fidelity of neighborhood structure using neighborhood overlap, average neighbor distance, normalized barycenter shift, and local intrinsic dimensionality (LID). Results show that exact k-NN and ANN search behave nearly identically when . However, as the neighborhood size grows and remains fixed, ANN search fails abruptly, exhibiting extreme divergence in neighbor distances at approximately k2 . Increasing index construction quality delays this failure, and scaling search effort proportionally with neighborhood size ( with α1) preserves neighborhood geometry across all evaluated metrics, including LID. The findings indicate that ANN search preserves neighborhood geometry within its operational capacity but abruptly fails when this capacity is exceeded. Documenting this behavior is relevant for scientific applications that approximate embedding spaces and provides practical guidance on when ANN search is interchangeable with exact k-NN and when geometric differences become nontrivial.

25 January 2026

Example images from the STL-10 dataset used for embedding and nearest neighbor analysis.
  • Study Protocol
  • Open Access

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common malignancy in men worldwide. Multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) improves the detection of clinically significant PCa (csPCa); however, it remains limited by false-positive findings and inter-observer variability. Time-dependent diffusion (TDD) MRI provides microstructural information that may enhance csPCa characterization beyond standard mpMRI. This prospective observational diagnostic accuracy study protocol describes the evaluation of PROS-TD-AI, an in-house developed AI workflow integrating TDD-derived metrics for zone-aware csPCa risk prediction. PROS-TD-AI will be compared with PI-RADS v2.1 in routine clinical imaging using MRI-targeted prostate biopsy as the reference standard.

22 January 2026

Study flow and imaging protocols. Key exclusion criteria and contraindications are listed on the left. TDD-derived microstructural parameters will be extracted from all patients undergoing mpMRI. mpMRI, multiparametric MRI; TDD, time-dependent diffusion; PI-RADS, Prostate Imaging–Reporting and Data System; csPCa, clinically significant prostate cancer; non-csPCa, non-clinically significant prostate cancer.

News & Conferences

Issues

Open for Submission

Editor's Choice

Reprints of Collections

Advances in Retinal Image Processing
Reprint

Advances in Retinal Image Processing

Editors: P. Jidesh, Vasudevan (Vengu) Lakshminarayanan

Get Alerted

Add your email address to receive forthcoming issues of this journal.

XFacebookLinkedIn
J. Imaging - ISSN 2313-433X