Eugene B. Postnikov

2papers

2 Papers

QMApr 19, 2017
A fast method for the detection of vascular structure in images, based on the continuous wavelet transform with the Morlet wavelet having a low central frequency

Eugene B. Postnikov, Maria O. Tsoy, Maxim A. Kurochkin et al.

A manual measurement of blood vessels diameter is a conventional component of routine visual assessment of microcirculation, say, during optical capillaroscopy. However, many modern optical methods for blood flow measurements demand the reliable procedure for a fully automated detection of vessels and estimation of their diameter that is a challenging task. Specifically, if one measure the velocity of red blood cells by means of laser speckle imaging, then visual measurements become impossible, while the velocity-based estimation has their own limitations. One of promising approaches is based on fast switching of illumination type, but it drastically reduces the observation time, and hence, the achievable quality of images. In the present work we address this problem proposing an alternative method for the processing of noisy images of vascular structure, which extracts the mask denoting locations of vessels, based on the application of the continuous wavelet transform with the Morlet wavelet having small central frequencies. Such a method combines a reasonable accuracy with the possibility of fast direct implementation to images. Discussing the latter, we describe in details a new MATLAB program code realization for the CWT with the Morlet wavelet, which does not use loops completely replaced with element-by-element operations that drastically reduces the computation time.

FAJul 17, 2015
Computational implementation of the inverse continuous wavelet transform without a requirement of the admissibility condition

Eugene B. Postnikov, Elena A. Lebedeva, Anastasia I. Lavrova

Recently, it has been proven [R. Soc. Open Sci. 1 (2014) 140124] that the continuous wavelet transform with non-admissible kernels (approximate wavelets) allows for an existence of the exact inverse transform. Here we consider the computational possibility for the realization of this approach. We provide modified simpler explanation of the reconstruction formula, restricted on the practical case of real valued finite (or periodic/periodized) samples and the standard (restricted) Morlet wavelet as a practically important example of an approximate wavelet. The provided examples of applications includes the test function and the non-stationary electro-physical signals arising in the problem of neuroscience.