Jingke Zhang

h-index91
2papers

2 Papers

ARMar 3, 2023
Study on the Data Storage Technology of Mini-Airborne Radar Based on Machine Learning

Haishan Tian, Qiong Yang, Huabing Wang et al.

The data rate of airborne radar is much higher than the wireless data transfer rate in many detection applications, so the onboard data storage systems are usually used to store the radar data. Data storage systems with good seismic performance usually use NAND Flash as storage medium, and there is a widespread problem of long file management time, which seriously affects the data storage speed, especially under the limitation of platform miniaturization. To solve this problem, a data storage method based on machine learning is proposed for mini-airborne radar. The storage training model is established based on machine learning, and could process various kinds of radar data. The file management methods are classified and determined using the model, and then are applied to the storage of radar data. To verify the performance of the proposed method, a test was carried out on the data storage system of a mini-airborne radar. The experimental results show that the method based on machine learning can form various data storage methods adapted to different data rates and application scenarios. The ratio of the file management time to the actual data writing time is extremely low.

IVJul 7, 2025
Self-supervised Deep Learning for Denoising in Ultrasound Microvascular Imaging

Lijie Huang, Jingyi Yin, Jingke Zhang et al.

Ultrasound microvascular imaging (UMI) is often hindered by low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), especially in contrast-free or deep tissue scenarios, which impairs subsequent vascular quantification and reliable disease diagnosis. To address this challenge, we propose Half-Angle-to-Half-Angle (HA2HA), a self-supervised denoising framework specifically designed for UMI. HA2HA constructs training pairs from complementary angular subsets of beamformed radio-frequency (RF) blood flow data, across which vascular signals remain consistent while noise varies. HA2HA was trained using in-vivo contrast-free pig kidney data and validated across diverse datasets, including contrast-free and contrast-enhanced data from pig kidneys, as well as human liver and kidney. An improvement exceeding 15 dB in both contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and SNR was observed, indicating a substantial enhancement in image quality. In addition to power Doppler imaging, denoising directly in the RF domain is also beneficial for other downstream processing such as color Doppler imaging (CDI). CDI results of human liver derived from the HA2HA-denoised signals exhibited improved microvascular flow visualization, with a suppressed noisy background. HA2HA offers a label-free, generalizable, and clinically applicable solution for robust vascular imaging in both contrast-free and contrast-enhanced UMI.