OPTICSCVJun 10, 2022

Optical Diffraction Tomography based on 3D Physics-Inspired Neural Network (PINN)

arXiv:2206.05236v13 citationsh-index: 87
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses a specific bottleneck in 3D imaging for semi-transparent samples, offering a novel method that could enhance reconstruction quality in applications like biological imaging.

The paper tackles the missing-cone problem in optical diffraction tomography, which causes elongation in 3D refractive index reconstructions, by proposing a 3D physics-inspired neural network that improves reconstruction accuracy without needing ground truth examples.

Optical diffraction tomography (ODT) is an emerging 3D imaging technique that is used for the 3D reconstruction of the refractive index (RI) for semi-transparent samples. Various inverse models have been proposed to reconstruct the 3D RI based on the holographic detection of different samples such as the Born and the Rytov approximations. However, such approximations usually suffer from the so-called missing-cone problem that results in an elongation of the final reconstruction along the optical axis. Different iterative schemes have been proposed to solve the missing cone problem relying on physical forward models and an error function that aims at filling in the k-space and thus eliminating the missing-cone problem and reaching better reconstruction accuracy. In this paper, we propose a different approach where a 3D neural network (NN) is employed. The NN is trained with a cost function derived from a physical model based on the physics of optical wave propagation. The 3D NN starts with an initial guess for the 3D RI reconstruction (i.e. Born, or Rytov) and aims at reconstructing better 3D reconstruction based on an error function. With this technique, the NN can be trained without any examples of the relation between the ill-posed reconstruction (Born or Rytov) and the ground truth (true shape).

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