USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.

Coded-aperture imaging offers a method of classical tomographic imaging by encoding the distance of a point from the detector by the lateral scale of the point response function. An estimate, termed a layergram, of the transverse sections of the object can be obtained by performing a simple correlat...

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Main Author: GINDI, GENE ROBERT.
Other Authors: Barrett, Harry
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184470
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1844702015-10-23T04:29:40Z USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS. GINDI, GENE ROBERT. Barrett, Harry Tomography -- Data processing. Image processing. Imaging systems in medicine -- Data processing. Coded-aperture imaging offers a method of classical tomographic imaging by encoding the distance of a point from the detector by the lateral scale of the point response function. An estimate, termed a layergram, of the transverse sections of the object can be obtained by performing a simple correlation operation on the detector data. The estimate of one transverse plane contains artifacts contributed by source points from all other planes. These artifacts can be partially removed by a nonlinear algorithm which incorporates a priori knowledge of total integrated object activity per transverse plane, positivity of the quantity being measured, and lateral extent of the object in each plane. The algorithm is iterative and contains, at each step, a linear operation followed by the imposition of a constraint. The use of this class of algorithms is tested by simulating a coded-aperture imaging situation using a one-dimensional code and two-dimensional (one axis perpendicular to aperture) object. Results show nearly perfect reconstructions in noise-free cases for the codes tested. If finite detector resolution and Poisson source noise are taken into account, the reconstructions are still significantly improved relative to the layergram. The algorithm lends itself to implementation on an optical-digital hybrid computer. The problems inherent in a prototype device are characterized and results of its performance are presented. 1982 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184470 682948435 8227351 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Tomography -- Data processing.
Image processing.
Imaging systems in medicine -- Data processing.
spellingShingle Tomography -- Data processing.
Image processing.
Imaging systems in medicine -- Data processing.
GINDI, GENE ROBERT.
USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.
description Coded-aperture imaging offers a method of classical tomographic imaging by encoding the distance of a point from the detector by the lateral scale of the point response function. An estimate, termed a layergram, of the transverse sections of the object can be obtained by performing a simple correlation operation on the detector data. The estimate of one transverse plane contains artifacts contributed by source points from all other planes. These artifacts can be partially removed by a nonlinear algorithm which incorporates a priori knowledge of total integrated object activity per transverse plane, positivity of the quantity being measured, and lateral extent of the object in each plane. The algorithm is iterative and contains, at each step, a linear operation followed by the imposition of a constraint. The use of this class of algorithms is tested by simulating a coded-aperture imaging situation using a one-dimensional code and two-dimensional (one axis perpendicular to aperture) object. Results show nearly perfect reconstructions in noise-free cases for the codes tested. If finite detector resolution and Poisson source noise are taken into account, the reconstructions are still significantly improved relative to the layergram. The algorithm lends itself to implementation on an optical-digital hybrid computer. The problems inherent in a prototype device are characterized and results of its performance are presented.
author2 Barrett, Harry
author_facet Barrett, Harry
GINDI, GENE ROBERT.
author GINDI, GENE ROBERT.
author_sort GINDI, GENE ROBERT.
title USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.
title_short USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.
title_full USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.
title_fullStr USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.
title_full_unstemmed USE OF A PRIORI INFORMATION FOR IMPROVED TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN CODED-APERTURE SYSTEMS.
title_sort use of a priori information for improved tomographic imaging in coded-aperture systems.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1982
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184470
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