Purpose: Hyperspectral imaging shows promise for surgical applications to non-invasively provide spatially resolved, spectral information. For calibration purposes, a white reference image of a highly reflective Lambertian surface should be obtained under the same imaging conditions. Standard white references are not sterilizable and so are unsuitable for surgical environments. We demonstrate the necessity for white references and address this by proposing a novel, sterile, synthetic reference construction algorithm.
Approach: The use of references obtained at different distances and lighting conditions to the subject were examined. Spectral and color reconstructions were compared with standard measurements qualitatively and quantitatively, using and normalized RMSE, respectively. The algorithm forms a composite image from a video of a standard sterile ruler, whose imperfect reflectivity is compensated for. The reference is modeled as the product of independent spatial and spectral components, and a scalar factor accounting for gain, exposure, and light intensity. Evaluation of synthetic references against ideal but non-sterile references is performed using the same metrics alongside pixel-by-pixel errors. Finally, intraoperative integration is assessed though cadaveric experiments.
Results: Improper white balancing leads to increases in all quantitative and qualitative errors. Synthetic references achieve median pixel-by-pixel errors lower than 6.5% and produce similar reconstructions and errors to an ideal reference. The algorithm integrated well into surgical workflow, achieving median pixel-by-pixel errors of 4.77% while maintaining good spectral and color reconstruction.
Conclusions: We demonstrate the importance of white referencing and present a novel synthetic referencing algorithm. This algorithm is suitable for surgery while maintaining the quality of classical data reconstruction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.JMI.10.4.046001 | DOI Listing |
Materials (Basel)
October 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
This article presents the first use of shape forming elements (SFEs) to produce architected composites from multiple materials in an extrusion process. Each SFE contains a matrix of flow channels connecting input and output ports, where materials are routed between corresponding ports. The mathematical operations of rotation and shifting are described, and design automation is explored using Bayesian optimization and genetic algorithms to select fifty or more parameters for minimizing two objective functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
November 2024
School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology, Nanyang Technological University, 21 Nanyang Link, Singapore 637371, Singapore.
Time-resolved photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) has established itself as a versatile experimental technique to unravel the ultrafast electron dynamics of materials with nanometer-scale resolution. However, the approach of performing PEEM-based, pixel-by-pixel lifetime mapping has not been reported thus far. Herein, we describe in detail the data pre-processing procedure and an algorithm to perform time-trace fittings of each pixel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Xray Sci Technol
December 2024
School of Mathematical Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China.
Background: Deformable image registration (DIR) plays an important part in many clinical tasks, and deep learning has made significant progress in DIR over the past few years.
Objective: To propose a fast multiscale unsupervised deformable image registration (referred to as FMIRNet) method for monomodal image registration.
Methods: We designed a multiscale fusion module to estimate the large displacement field by combining and refining the deformation fields of three scales.
Sensors (Basel)
June 2024
Aerospace Ground Simulation Test and Testing Technology Institute, Changchun University of Science and Technology, Changchun 130012, China.
Dark-and-weak-target simulators are used as ground-based calibration devices to test and calibrate the performance metrics of star sensors. However, these simulators are affected by full-field-of-view energy nonuniformity. This problem impacts the quality of output images and the calibration accuracy of sensors and inhibits further improvements in navigational accuracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
April 2024
School of Information Engineering, University of Information Engineering, Zhengzhou 450000, China.
The identification of multi-source signals with time-frequency aliasing is a complex problem in wideband signal reception. The traditional method of first separation and identification especially fails due to the significant separation error under underdetermined conditions when the degree of time-frequency aliasing is high. The single-mode recognition method does not need to be separated first.
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