%0 Journal Article %T Complete fourier direct magnetic resonance imaging (CFD-MRI) for diffusion MRI %A Alpay £¿zcan %J Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience %D 2013 %I Frontiers Media %R 10.3389/fnint.2013.00018 %X The foundation for an accurate and unifying Fourier-based theory of diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW¨CMRI) is constructed by carefully re-examining the first principles of DW¨CMRI signal formation and deriving its mathematical model from scratch. The derivations are specifically obtained for DW¨CMRI signal by including all of its elements (e.g., imaging gradients) using complex values. Particle methods are utilized in contrast to conventional partial differential equations approach. The signal is shown to be the Fourier transform of the joint distribution of number of the magnetic moments (at a given location at the initial time) and magnetic moment displacement integrals. In effect, the k-space is augmented by three more dimensions, corresponding to the frequency variables dual to displacement integral vectors. The joint distribution function is recovered by applying the Fourier transform to the complete high-dimensional data set. In the process, to obtain a physically meaningful real valued distribution function, phase corrections are applied for the re-establishment of Hermitian symmetry in the signal. Consequently, the method is fully unconstrained and directly presents the distribution of displacement integrals without any assumptions such as symmetry or Markovian property. The joint distribution function is visualized with isosurfaces, which describe the displacement integrals, overlaid on the distribution map of the number of magnetic moments with low mobility. The model provides an accurate description of the molecular motion measurements via DW¨CMRI. The improvement of the characterization of tissue microstructure leads to a better localization, detection and assessment of biological properties such as white matter integrity. The results are demonstrated on the experimental data obtained from an ex vivo baboon brain. %K magnetic resonance imaging %K diffusion weighted imaging %K fourier transform %U http://www.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2013.00018/abstract