학술논문

Removal of optical fiber interference in color micro-endoscopic images
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings. 11th IEEE Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems (Cat. No.98CB36237) Computer-based medical systems Computer-Based Medical Systems, 1998. Proceedings. 11th IEEE Symposium on. :246-251 1998
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Robotics and Control Systems
Optical fibers
Interference
Frequency
Information filtering
Information filters
Optical imaging
Optical fiber filters
Degradation
Endoscopes
Medical diagnosis
Language
ISSN
1063-7125
Abstract
Flexible micro-endoscopes produce images that are obscured by a 'honeycomb' pattern due to the negative space between the individual optical fibers contained in the imaging conduit. This pattern is found to exhibit a spatial frequency that is visibly distinct from that of the imaged object. By applying a frequency filter, it was possible to remove the honeycomb pattern without significant degradation to the visual quality of the image. This process greatly increases the perceived quality of the information being obtained by the endoscopes and aids in their effective use for medical diagnosis. The technique described employs Fourier spectral analysis to determine the 'noise' component in the original image. A discrete band-reject frequency filter was designed by visually examining the spectral information and creating the necessary filter to block out the undesired frequency bond. The honeycomb pattern was no longer distinguishable after applying this filter to a test gray-level image of an Air Force calibration target. Next, the filter was applied to the individual color planes of a sample color image. The color planes were recombined to produce a full-color image that was free from interference. A full description of the methods involved is presented.