Diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) is an optical technique which, by studying the speckle intensity fluctuations of coherent light diffused in a turbid medium, retrieves information regarding the scatterers motion. In the case of biological tissues, the particles of interest are the red blood cells, from which is possible to measure non-invasively microvascular blood flow (BF). However, being based on a continuous-wave light source, depth discrimination is achievable only by using multiple source-detector separations. On the other hand, time-domain (TD) DCS is a novel approach which exploits a pulsed yet coherent light source to discriminate the intensity fluctuations at...