Hannah Jansen

1paper

1 Paper

MED-PHJun 14, 2021
No more glowing in the dark: How deep learning improves exposure date estimation in thermoluminescence dosimetry

Florian Mentzel, Evelin Derugin, Hannah Jansen et al.

The time- or temperature-resolved detector signal from a thermoluminescence dosimeter can reveal additional information about circumstances of an exposure to ionizing irradiation. We present studies using deep neural networks to estimate the date of a single irradiation with 12 mSv within a monitoring interval of 42 days from glow curves of novel TL-DOS personal dosimeters developed by the Materialprüfungsamt NRW in cooperation with TU Dortmund University. Using a deep convolutional network, the irradiation date can be predicted from raw time-resolved glow curve data with an uncertainty of roughly 1-2 days on a 68% confidence level without the need for a prior transformation into temperature space and a subsequent glow curve deconvolution. This corresponds to a significant improvement in prediction accuracy compared to a prior publication, which yielded a prediction uncertainty of 2-4 days using features obtained from a glow curve deconvolution as input to a neural network.