| Literature DB >> 20799815 |
Jana M Kainerstorfer1, Franck Amyot, Martin Ehler, Moinuddin Hassan, Stavros G Demos, Victor Chernomordik, Christoph K Hitzenberger, Amir H Gandjbakhche, Jason D Riley.
Abstract
Noncontact optical imaging of curved objects can result in strong artifacts due to the object's shape, leading to curvature biased intensity distributions. This artifact can mask variations due to the object's optical properties, and makes reconstruction of optical/physiological properties difficult. In this work we demonstrate a curvature correction method that removes this artifact and recovers the underlying data, without the necessity of measuring the object's shape. This method is applicable to many optical imaging modalities that suffer from shape-based intensity biases. By separating the spatially varying data (e.g., physiological changes) from the background signal (dc component), we show that the curvature can be extracted by either averaging or fitting the rows and columns of the images. Numerical simulations show that our method is equivalent to directly removing the curvature, when the object's shape is known, and accurately recovers the underlying data. Experiments on phantoms validate the numerical results and show that for a given image with 16.5% error due to curvature, the method reduces that error to 1.2%. Finally, diffuse multispectral images are acquired on forearms in vivo. We demonstrate the enhancement in image quality on intensity images, and consequently on reconstruction results of blood volume and oxygenation distributions.Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20799815 PMCID: PMC2929261 DOI: 10.1117/1.3470094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170