Litcius/Paper detail

Noise and bias in optical coherence tomography intensity signal decorrelation

Néstor Uribe‐Patarroyo, Anouk L. Post, Sebastián Ruiz-Lopera, Dirk J. Faber, Brett E. Bouma

2020OSA Continuum28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Functional optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging based on the decorrelation of the intensity signal has been used extensively in angiography and is finding use in flowmetry and therapy monitoring. In this work, we present a rigorous analysis of the autocorrelation function, introduce the concepts of contrast bias, statistical bias and variability, and identify the optimal definition of the second-order autocorrelation function (ACF) g (2) to improve its estimation from limited data. We benchmark different averaging strategies in reducing statistical bias and variability. We also developed an analytical correction for the noise contributions to the decorrelation of the ACF in OCT that extends the signal-to-noise ratio range in which ACF analysis can be used. We demonstrate the use of all the tools developed in the experimental determination of the lateral speckle size depth dependence in a rotational endoscopic probe with low NA, and we show the ability to more accurately determine the rotational speed of an endoscopic probe to implement NURD detection. We finally present g (2) -based angiography of the finger nailbed, demonstrating the improved results from noise correction and the optimal bias mitigation strategies.

Topics & Concepts

DecorrelationAutocorrelationOptical coherence tomographyNoise (video)Speckle patternCoherence (philosophical gambling strategy)SIGNAL (programming language)Computer scienceBenchmark (surveying)Signal-to-noise ratio (imaging)Speckle noiseOpticsPhysicsMathematicsArtificial intelligenceAlgorithmStatisticsGeologyImage (mathematics)GeodesyProgramming languageOptical Coherence Tomography ApplicationsPhotoacoustic and Ultrasonic ImagingGlaucoma and retinal disorders
Noise and bias in optical coherence tomography intensity signal decorrelation | Litcius