학술논문

Autoregressive Model-Based Reconstruction of Quantitative Acoustic Maps From RF Signals Sampled at Innovation Rate
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Computational Imaging IEEE Trans. Comput. Imaging Computational Imaging, IEEE Transactions on. 6:993-1006 2020
Subject
Signal Processing and Analysis
Computing and Processing
General Topics for Engineers
Geoscience
Quadrature amplitude modulation
RF signals
Acoustics
Image reconstruction
Radio frequency
Technological innovation
Microscopy
Scanning acoustic microscopy
finite rate of innovation
auto-regressive model
Language
ISSN
2573-0436
2333-9403
2334-0118
Abstract
The principle of quantitative acoustic microscopy (QAM) is to form two-dimensional (2D) acoustic parameter maps from a collection of radiofrequency (RF) signals acquired by raster scanning a biological sample. Despite their relatively simple structure consisting of two main reflections, RF signals are currently sampled at very high frequencies, e.g. , at 2.5 GHz for QAM system employing a single-element transducer with a center frequency of 250-MHz. The use of such high sampling frequencies is challenging because of the potentially large amount of acquired data and the cost of the necessary analog to digital converters. Based on a parametric model characterizing QAM RF signals, the objective of this article is to use the finite rate of innovation (FRI) framework in order to significantly reduce the number of acquired samples. These are then used to compute Fourier coefficients that are directly fed into a state-of-the-art autoregressive (AR)-based method to estimate the model parameters, which finally leads to the reconstruction of accurate 2D maps. The combination of FRI and AR model for sampling and parametric map recovery allows decreasing the required number of samples per RF signal up to a factor of 18 compared to a conventional approach, with a minimal accuracy loss of quantitative acoustic maps, as proven by visual evaluations and numerical results, i.e. PSNR of 24.50 dB and 24.51 dB for the reconstructed speed of sound map and acoustic impedance map respectively.