Detail publikace

High-Resolution Ultrasonic Imaging Using Fast Two-Dimensional Homomorphic Filtering

JIŘÍK, R. TAXT, T.

Originální název

High-Resolution Ultrasonic Imaging Using Fast Two-Dimensional Homomorphic Filtering

Typ

článek v časopise - ostatní, Jost

Jazyk

angličtina

Originální abstrakt

A new method for two-dimensional deconvolution of medical ultrasonic images is presented. The spatial resolution of the deconvolved images is much higher compared to the common images of the fundamental and second harmonic. The deconvolution also results in a more distinct speckle pattern. Unlike the most published deconvolution algorithms for ultrasonic images, the presented technique can be implemented using currently available hardware in real-time imaging, with rate up to 50 frames per second. This makes it attractive for application in the current ultrasound scanners. The algorithm is based on two-dimensional homomorphic deconvolution with simplified assumptions about the point spread function. Broadband radiofrequency image data are deconvolved instead of common fundamental-harmonic data. Thus, information of both the first and second harmonics is used. The method was validated on image data recorded from a tissue-mimicking phantom and on clinical image data.

Klíčová slova

ultrasonic imaging, 2-D deconvolution, real-time deconvolution, homomorphic filtering, cepstral analysis, broadband

Autoři

JIŘÍK, R.; TAXT, T.

Rok RIV

2006

Vydáno

1. 1. 2006

Nakladatel

IEEE Inc.

Místo

USA

ISSN

0885-3010

Periodikum

IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonocs, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control

Ročník

53

Číslo

8

Stát

Spojené státy americké

Strany od

1440

Strany do

1448

Strany počet

9

BibTex

@article{BUT43790,
  author="Radovan {Jiřík} and Torfinn {Taxt}",
  title="High-Resolution Ultrasonic Imaging Using Fast Two-Dimensional Homomorphic Filtering",
  journal="IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonocs, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control",
  year="2006",
  volume="53",
  number="8",
  pages="9",
  issn="0885-3010"
}