Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
July 2023
Conventional ultrasound (US) imaging employs the delay and sum (DAS) receive beamforming with dynamic receive focus for image reconstruction due to its simplicity and robustness. However, the DAS beamforming follows a geometrical method of delay estimation with a spatially constant speed-of-sound (SoS) of 1540 m/s throughout the medium irrespective of the tissue in-homogeneity. This approximation leads to errors in delay estimations that accumulate with depth and degrades the resolution, contrast and overall accuracy of the US image.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Phys Eng Express
August 2022
Low Performing Pixel (LPP)/bad pixel in CT detectors cause ring and streaks artifacts, structured non-uniformities and deterioration of the image quality. These artifacts make the image unusable for diagnostic purposes. A missing/defective detector pixel translates to a channel missing across all views in sinogram domain and its effect gets spill over entire image in reconstruction domain as artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSignal processing methods based on maximum-likelihood theory, discrete chirp Fourier transform, and spectral estimation methods have enabled accurate measurement of phase in phase-shifting interferometry in the presence of nonlinear response of the piezoelectric transducer to the applied voltage. We present the statistical study of these generalized nonlinear phase step estimation methods to identify the best method by deriving the Cramér-Rao bound. We also address important aspects of these methods for implementation in practical applications and compare the performance of the best-identified method with other bench marking algorithms in the presence of harmonics and noise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis
March 2007
The introduction of high-resolution phase-shifting interferometry methods such as annihilation filter, state space, multiple-signal classification, minimum norm, estimation of signal parameter via rotational invariance, and maximum-likelihood estimator have enabled the estimation of phase in an interferogram in the presence of harmonics and noise. These methods are also effective in holographic moiré where incorporating two piezoelectric transducers (PZTs) yields two orthogonal displacement components simultaneously. Typically, when these methods are used, the first step involves estimating the phase steps pixelwise; then the interference phase distribution is computed by designing a Vandermonde system of equations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) has emerged as a powerful technique for measuring low concentrations of fluorescent molecules and their diffusion constants. In FCS, the experimental data is conventionally fit using standard local search techniques, for example, the Marquardt-Levenberg (ML) algorithm. A prerequisite for these categories of algorithms is the sound knowledge of the behavior of fit parameters and in most cases good initial guesses for accurate fitting, otherwise leading to fitting artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA phase shifting device (PZT) which is commonly applied in interferometry for phase measurement, unfortunately, has a nonlinear response to the applied voltage. In certain configurations such as, holographic moiré, where incorporation of two PZTs yields multiple phase information regarding the two orthogonal displacement components, the nonlinear response of the two PZTs yields highly erroneous result. In this context, we present for the first time a method for compensating multiple nonlinearities in the PZTs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel method for estimating pixelwise phase step values in phase-shifting interferometry is presented. The method is based on the linear prediction property of the intensity fringes recorded temporally at a pixel on the charged-coupled device. The salient features of the method lie in their ability to handle linear miscalibration errors, to compensate for the presence of harmonics in an optical configuration and detector nonlinearity, and to allow for the use of arbitrary phase steps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe propose a new approach for estimating the phase in the presence of a nonlinear response of a phase-shifting device: a piezoelectric transducer (PZT). The method is complemented well by the high resolution and the maximum likelihood estimation techniques in the estimation of the phase step and the nonlinear coefficient. The advantage of the proposed method is that it can be extended to the extraction of multiple phases in configurations involving multiple PZTs in the presence of nonlinearity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA phase-shifting piezo device commonly employed in phase-shifting interferometry exhibits a nonlinear response to applied voltage. Hence, a method for estimation of phase distribution in the presence of nonlinear phase steps is presented. The proposed method compensates for the harmonics present in the intensity fringe, allows the use of arbitrary phase-step values between 0 and tau rad, and does not impose constraints on the selection of particular phase-step values for minimizing nonlinearity and compensating for the harmonics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe paper presents approaches based on traditional phase shifting, flexible least-squares, and signal processing methods in dual phase shifting interferometry primarily applied to holographic moiré for retrieving multiple phases. The study reveals that these methods cannot be applied straightforward to retrieve phase information and discusses the constraints associated with these methods. Since the signal processing method is the most efficient among these approaches, the paper discusses significant issues involved in the successful implementation of the concept.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA phase shifting method based on high-resolution frequency estimation and Fourier transform technique is introduced. This method, also referred to as the eigenvector method, draws on the complementary strengths of both these methods. The salient feature of the method lies in its ability to handle nonsinusoidal wave-forms, multiple piezoelectric transducers, and arbitrary phase steps in an optical configuration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA state space model for the determination of dual phase distributions in a holographic moiré in the presence of nonsinusoidal waveforms, random noise, and miscalibration of the piezoelectric (PZT) devices is proposed. The extraction of these phase terms requires incorporating two PZTs into the moiré setup. A Toeplitz approximation method (TAM) is applied for phase determination, and modification to the Toeplitz covariance matrix formed from the phase-shifted moiré fringes by application of a denoising step in the state-feedback matrix is proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpt Express
September 2005
The paper proposes a super-resolution Fourier transform method for phase estimation in phase shifting interferometry. Incorporation of a super-resolution technique before the application of Fourier transform significantly enhances the resolution capability of the proposed method. The other salient features of the method lie in its ability to handle multiple harmonics, PZT miscalibration, and arbitrary phase steps in the optical configuration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn integral approach to phase measurement is presented. First, the use of a high-resolution technique for the pixelwise detection of phase steps is proposed. Next, the robustness of the algorithm that is developed is improved by incorporation of a denoising procedure during spectral estimation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective of this paper is to describe an integral approach - based on the use of a super-resolution frequency estimation method - to phase shifting interferometry, starting from phase step estimation to phase evaluation at each point on the object surface. Denoising is also taken into consideration for the case of a signal contaminated with white Gaussian noise. The other significant features of the proposal are that it caters to the presence of multiple PZTs in an optical configuration, is capable of determining An integral approach to phase shifting the harmonic content in the signal and effectively eliminating their influence on measurement, is insensitive to errors arising from PZT miscalibration, is applicable to spherical beams, and is a robust performer even in the presence of white Gaussian intensity noise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report experimental results of quantitative imaging in supersonic circular jets by using a monochromatic light probe. An expanding cone of light interrogates a three-dimensional volume of a supersonic steady-state flow from a circular jet. The distortion caused to the spherical wave by the presence of the jet is determined through our measuring normal intensity transport.
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