David A. Barmherzig

2papers

2 Papers

LGDec 14, 2020
Phase Retrieval with Holography and Untrained Priors: Tackling the Challenges of Low-Photon Nanoscale Imaging

Hannah Lawrence, David A. Barmherzig, Henry Li et al.

Phase retrieval is the inverse problem of recovering a signal from magnitude-only Fourier measurements, and underlies numerous imaging modalities, such as Coherent Diffraction Imaging (CDI). A variant of this setup, known as holography, includes a reference object that is placed adjacent to the specimen of interest before measurements are collected. The resulting inverse problem, known as holographic phase retrieval, is well-known to have improved problem conditioning relative to the original. This innovation, i.e. Holographic CDI, becomes crucial at the nanoscale, where imaging specimens such as viruses, proteins, and crystals require low-photon measurements. This data is highly corrupted by Poisson shot noise, and often lacks low-frequency content as well. In this work, we introduce a dataset-free deep learning framework for holographic phase retrieval adapted to these challenges. The key ingredients of our approach are the explicit and flexible incorporation of the physical forward model into an automatic differentiation procedure, the Poisson log-likelihood objective function, and an optional untrained deep image prior. We perform extensive evaluation under realistic conditions. Compared to competing classical methods, our method recovers signal from higher noise levels and is more resilient to suboptimal reference design, as well as to large missing regions of low frequencies in the observations. Finally, we show that these properties carry over to experimental data acquired on optical wavelengths. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to consider a dataset-free machine learning approach for holographic phase retrieval.

IVFeb 7, 2019
Dual-Reference Design for Holographic Coherent Diffraction Imaging

David A. Barmherzig, Ju Sun, Emmanuel J. Candès et al.

A new reference design is introduced for holographic coherent diffraction imaging. This consists in two references - "block" and "pinhole" shaped regions - placed adjacent to the imaging specimen. An efficient recovery algorithm is provided for the resulting holographic phase retrieval problem, which is based on solving a structured, overdetermined linear system. Analysis of the expected recovery error on noisy data, which is contaminated by Poisson shot noise, shows that this simple modification synergizes the individual references and hence leads to uniformly superior performance over single-reference schemes. Numerical experiments on simulated data confirm the theoretical prediction, and the proposed dual-reference scheme achieves a smaller recovery error than leading single-reference schemes.