| Literature DB >> 30108233 |
Ali Hasnain1, Kalpesh Mehta1, Xiaowei Zhou1, Hongsheng Li2, Nanguang Chen3.
Abstract
Time-domain diffuse optical measurement systems determine depth-resolved absorption changes by using the time of flight distribution of the detected photons. It is well known that certain feature data, such as the Laplace transform of the temporal point spread function, is sufficient for image reconstruction and diffuse optical sensing. Conventional time-domain systems require the acquisition of full temporal profiles of diffusive photons and then numerically compute the feature dataset, for example, Laplace transformed intensities for imaging applications. We have proposed a novel method for directly obtaining the Laplace transform data. Our approach can significantly improve the data acquisition speed for time-domain diffuse optical imaging. We also demonstrated that the use of negative Laplace parameters can provide enhanced sensitivity to perturbations located in deep regions.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30108233 PMCID: PMC6092403 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30353-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic design of Laplace-domain DOS. The thick lines represent the electrical signal and the thin lines represent the optical signal.
Figure 2Signal path for obtaining a Laplace transformed intensity of diffusive photons. A Laplace filter is inserted between the APD preamplifier and the primary demodulator (analog multiplier).
Figure 3Comparison between Laplace transform data obtained from TPSFs vs Experimental Laplace-domain data (a) Laplace filter F1 enabled (negative s) (b) Laplace filter F2 enabled (positive s).
Figure 4(a) A typical TPSF (normalized) and Laplace transform kernels of different frequencies. (b) Simulated perturbation at varying s values. (c) Experimental perturbations obtained from the time-domain (solid) and direct Laplace-domain (dashed) data at varying s values. (d) Simulated perturbations at varying bead depths. (e) Experimental perturbation obtained from the time-domain and direct Laplace-domain data at varying bead depths. The legend TDxx refers to data obtained using the Laplace transform of the time-domain data for a perturbation located at the depth xx in cm. Legend LDxx refers to data obtained using the proposed Laplace-domain system for a perturbation located at the depth xx in cm.
Figure 5Perturbation comparison between Laplace transform data obtained with TPSFs vs. Direct Laplace transform data (Lower contrast case) (a) Simulated perturbation at varying s values. (b) Experimental perturbation computed from time-domain and direct Laplace-domain data at varying s values. (c) Simulated perturbation at varying bead depths. (d) Experimental perturbation computed from time-domain and direct Laplace-domain data at varying bead depths. The legend TDxx refers to data obtained using the Laplace transform of the time-domain data for a perturbation located at the depth xx in cm. The legend LDxx refers to data obtained using the proposed Laplace-domain system for a perturbation located at the depth xx in cm.