Quantitative photoacoustic tomography (QPAT) is a hybrid medical imaging modality that combines high-resolution ultrasound tomography with high-contrast optical tomography. The objective of QPAT is to recover certain optical properties of heterogeneous media from measured ultrasound signals, generated by the photoacoustic effect, on the surfaces of the media. Mathematically, QPAT is an inverse problem where we intend to reconstruct physical parameters in a set of partial differential equations from partial knowledge of the solution of the equations. A rather complete mathematical theory for the QPAT inverse problem has been developed in the literature for the case where the speed of ultrasound inside the underlying medium is known. In pract...
We present a method to generate quantitative cross-sectional maps of acoustic propagation speed in t...
We present, perhaps for the first time, a stochastic search algorithm in quantitative photoacoustic ...
The effects of an inappropriately chosen speed-of-sound in photoacoustic imaging reconstructions are...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography (QPAT) is a hybrid medical imaging modality that combines high...
Photoacoustic tomography is a hybrid imaging method that combines optical contrast and ultrasound re...
Purpose: In most photoacoustic (PA) tomographic reconstructions, variations in speed-of-sound (SOS) ...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is a novel imaging method which aims to reconstruct optical pa...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is an emerging imaging technique aimed at estimating the optic...
Photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is an imaging technique combining strong contrast of optical imaging ...
Quantitative photo-acoustic tomography (QPAT) seeks to reconstruct a distribution of optical attenu...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is an emerging imaging technique aimed at estimating the distr...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is an emerging imaging technique aimed at estimating optical p...
Our project’s main objective is to design and improve an accurate, reliable image reconstruction alg...
Imaging methods applied to living organisms with emphasis on innovative approaches that use emerging...
Photoacoustic imaging is the imaging technology that combines the optical imaging and ultrasound. Th...
We present a method to generate quantitative cross-sectional maps of acoustic propagation speed in t...
We present, perhaps for the first time, a stochastic search algorithm in quantitative photoacoustic ...
The effects of an inappropriately chosen speed-of-sound in photoacoustic imaging reconstructions are...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography (QPAT) is a hybrid medical imaging modality that combines high...
Photoacoustic tomography is a hybrid imaging method that combines optical contrast and ultrasound re...
Purpose: In most photoacoustic (PA) tomographic reconstructions, variations in speed-of-sound (SOS) ...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is a novel imaging method which aims to reconstruct optical pa...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is an emerging imaging technique aimed at estimating the optic...
Photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is an imaging technique combining strong contrast of optical imaging ...
Quantitative photo-acoustic tomography (QPAT) seeks to reconstruct a distribution of optical attenu...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is an emerging imaging technique aimed at estimating the distr...
Quantitative photoacoustic tomography is an emerging imaging technique aimed at estimating optical p...
Our project’s main objective is to design and improve an accurate, reliable image reconstruction alg...
Imaging methods applied to living organisms with emphasis on innovative approaches that use emerging...
Photoacoustic imaging is the imaging technology that combines the optical imaging and ultrasound. Th...
We present a method to generate quantitative cross-sectional maps of acoustic propagation speed in t...
We present, perhaps for the first time, a stochastic search algorithm in quantitative photoacoustic ...
The effects of an inappropriately chosen speed-of-sound in photoacoustic imaging reconstructions are...