OPTICSCVIVTOJul 3, 2021

Imaging dynamics beneath turbid media via parallelized single-photon detection

arXiv:2107.01422v417 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This enables deep-tissue video reconstruction of decorrelation dynamics for biomedical applications, representing a novel experimental demonstration rather than an incremental improvement.

The researchers tackled noninvasive optical imaging through dynamic scattering media by using a single-photon avalanche diode array camera and deep neural network to reconstruct video of scattering dynamics beneath tissue phantoms, achieving imaging of transient events up to 8 mm deep with millimeter-scale resolution.

Noninvasive optical imaging through dynamic scattering media has numerous important biomedical applications but still remains a challenging task. While standard diffuse imaging methods measure optical absorption or fluorescent emission, it is also well-established that the temporal correlation of scattered coherent light diffuses through tissue much like optical intensity. Few works to date, however, have aimed to experimentally measure and process such temporal correlation data to demonstrate deep-tissue video reconstruction of decorrelation dynamics. In this work, we utilize a single-photon avalanche diode (SPAD) array camera to simultaneously monitor the temporal dynamics of speckle fluctuations at the single-photon level from 12 different phantom tissue surface locations delivered via a customized fiber bundle array. We then apply a deep neural network to convert the acquired single-photon measurements into video of scattering dynamics beneath rapidly decorrelating tissue phantoms. We demonstrate the ability to reconstruct images of transient (0.1-0.4s) dynamic events occurring up to 8 mm beneath a decorrelating tissue phantom with millimeter-scale resolution, and highlight how our model can flexibly extend to monitor flow speed within buried phantom vessels.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes