To simplify the medical ultrasound system and reduce the cost, several techniques have been proposed to reduce the interconnections between the ultrasound probe and the back-end console. Among them, subaperture processing (SAP) is the most straightforward approach and is widely used in commercial products. This paper reviews the most important error sources of SAP, such as static focusing, delay quantization, linear delay profile, and coarse apodization, and the impacts introduced by these errors are shown. We propose to use main lobe coherence loss as a simple classification of the quality of the beam profile for a given design. This figure-ofmerit (FoM) is evaluated by simulations with a 1-D ultrasound subaperture array setup. The analytical expressions and the coherence loss can work as a quick guideline in subaperture design by equalizing the merit degradations from different error sources, as well as minimizing the average or maximum loss over ranges. For the evaluated 1-D array example, a good balance between errors and cost was achieved using a subaperture size of 5 elements, focus at 40 mm range, and a delay quantization step corresponding to a phase of π/4.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TUFFC.2014.006822 | DOI Listing |
A single crystal sapphire component has been widely used in various high-tech fields because of its significant advantages such as high hardness, high stability, and excellent optical and mechanical properties, and has put forward high requirements for surface accuracy and quality. The existing sapphire polishing technology has problems such as low polishing efficiency, difficult control of polishing accuracy, and difficulty in removing surface defects and subsurface damage introduced by the front grinding process. Therefore, for the polishing and damage removal stage of sapphire optical components, the surface shape accuracy should be strictly controlled, especially for the surface shape accuracy after ultra-precision grinding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
October 2024
Institut Langevin, ESPCI Paris, PSL University, CNRS, 75005 Paris, France.
The process of obtaining images of capillary vessels in the human eye's fundus using Doppler holography encounters difficulties due to ocular aberrations. To enhance the accuracy of these images, it is advantageous to apply an adaptive aberration correction technique. This study focuses on numerical Shack-Hartmann, which employs sub-pupil correlation as the wavefront sensing method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
September 2024
Laboratoire d'Informatique et des Systèmes (LIS), CNRS, Aix-Marseille University, 13009 Marseille, France.
In this paper, we study facial expression recognition (FER) using three modalities obtained from a light field camera: sub-aperture (SA), depth map, and all-in-focus (AiF) images. Our objective is to construct a more comprehensive and effective FER system by investigating multimodal fusion strategies. For this purpose, we employ EfficientNetV2-S, pre-trained on AffectNet, as our primary convolutional neural network.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSub-aperture polishing is a key technique for fabricating ultra-precision optics. However, the existence of the polishing errors that are difficult to be compensated by physical modeling seriously affects the manufacturing accuracy and efficiency of optical components. To address this problem, a data-based systematic error extraction and compensation (DSEC) method was proposed to enhance the polishing accuracy on optics.
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