Paper
18 August 1997 Concentration, size, mean lifetime, and noise effects on image quality in luminescence optical tomography
Jenghwa Chang, Harry L. Graber, Randall Locke Barbour
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Abstract
The impact of background lumiphore in luminescence optical tomography is examined. To demonstrate its effects, numerical simulations were performed to calculate the diffusion-regime limiting form of forward-problem solutions for a specific test medium. Image reconstructions were performed using a CGD algorithm with a rescaling technique and positivity constraints. In addition, we develop a modification to the basic algorithm that makes use of the maximum possible concentration in order to estimate the background concentration, and show that it improves image quality when background lumiphore is present. We conclude that the usual measure of background lumiphore's effect, which is the target- to-background lumiphore concentration ratio, is not adequate to define the contribution from the background lumiphore. The reason for this is that image quality is also a function of target size and location. An alternative measure that we find superior is described. The results indicate that the improved algorithm yields better image quality for low target-to- background ratios.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jenghwa Chang, Harry L. Graber, and Randall Locke Barbour "Concentration, size, mean lifetime, and noise effects on image quality in luminescence optical tomography", Proc. SPIE 2979, Optical Tomography and Spectroscopy of Tissue: Theory, Instrumentation, Model, and Human Studies II, (18 August 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.280221
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Reconstruction algorithms

Detection and tracking algorithms

Sensors

Signal detection

Image quality

Optical tomography

Target detection

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