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An embedded system based digital onboard hardware calibration for low-cost functional diffuse optical tomography system

Saikia, MJ (2021) An embedded system based digital onboard hardware calibration for low-cost functional diffuse optical tomography system. In: Optics and Biophotonics in Low-Resource Settings VII 2021, 6 - 11 March 2021, Virtual, Online.

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2577332

Abstract

Functional diffuse optical tomography (fDOT) system for breast imaging consists of an optical fiber-based light delivery subsystem to sequentially inject multi-wavelength NIR light at multiple locations on the tissue surface and a diffuse transmitted light measurement subsystem. In the low-cost fDOT, few NIR light sources and detectors are electromechanically multiplexed. Though it reduces cost substantially, it adds measurement uncertainty and this increases with the measurement cycle. Traditionally homogeneous phantom measurement data is used for the high-level system calibration. In this paper, an embedded system based digital calibration technique in the hardware level for the electromechanical optical fiber switch-based 3D fDOT system is proposed that is suitable for the low-resource settings. The system has four LED sources of four wavelengths (660, 735, 810 and 850 nm) and 24 SiPD detectors. An algorithm was developed and programmed a microcontroller-based circuitry to digitally control the electromechanics with a spatial resolution of 12.5 micro meter to couple the four-wavelength NIR sources to sixteen source fibers. A calibration scheme was adopted for source illuminations that takes feedback from a power meter to the controller and digitally calibrates to ensure that light entering the imaging domain is near identical. Measurement data from a homogeneous and a heterogeneous phantom was used to study measurement uncertainty and noise performance, and to compare with the traditional method. Experimental results statistically showed that active hardware-level digital calibration improved the measurement accuracy and convergence of the image reconstruction that can open up to a fast, reliable, and cost-effective fDOT system. Copyright © 2021 SPIE.

Item Type: Conference Paper
Publication: Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging - Proceedings of SPIE
Publisher: SPIE
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to SPIE.
Keywords: Calibration; Cost effectiveness; Costs; Embedded systems; Image enhancement; Image reconstruction; Infrared devices; Light; Light sources; Medical imaging; Optical fibers; Optical tomography; Phantoms; Photonics, Diffuse optical tomography; Digital calibrations; Low-resource settings; Measurement accuracy; Measurement uncertainty; Microcontroller-based; Optical fiber switches; Phantom measurements, Uncertainty analysis
Department/Centre: Division of Physical & Mathematical Sciences > Physics
Date Deposited: 24 Mar 2023 10:30
Last Modified: 24 Mar 2023 10:30
URI: https://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/81132

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