Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Virginia Univ., Charlottesville, VA, USA
Abstract :
Time-delay estimation (TDE) is a common operation in ultrasound signal processing. In applications such as blood flow estimation, elastography, phase aberration correction, and many more, the quality of final results is heavily dependent upon the performance of the time-delay estimator implemented. In the past years, several algorithms have been developed and applied in medical ultrasound, sonar, radar, and other fields. In this paper we analyze the performances of the widely used normalized and non-normalized correlations, along with normalized covariance, sum absolute differences (SAD), sum squared differences (SSD), hybrid-sign correlation, polarity-coincidence correlation, and the Meyr-Spies method. These techniques have been applied to simulated ultrasound radio frequency (RF) data under a variety of conditions. We show how parameters, which include center frequency, fractional bandwidth, kernel window size, signal decorrelation, and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) affect the quality of the delay estimate. Simulation results also are compared with a theoretical performance limit set by the Cramer-Rao lower bound (CRLB). Results show that, for high SNR, high signal correlation, and large kernel size, all of the algorithms closely match the theoretical bound, with relative performances that vary by as much as 20%. As conditions degrade, the performances of various algorithms differ more significantly. For signals with a correlation level of 0.98, SNR of 30 dB, center frequency of 5 MHz with a fractional bandwidth of 0.5, and kernel size of 2 /spl mu/s, the standard deviation of the jitter error is on the order of few nanoseconds. Normalized correlation, normalized covariance, and SSD have an approximately equal jitter error of 2.23 ns (the value predicted by the CRLB is 2.073 ns), whereas the polarity-coincidence correlation performs less well with a jitter error of 2.74 ns.
Keywords :
acoustic signal processing; biomedical ultrasonics; delay estimation; medical signal processing; timing jitter; 5 MHz; Cramer-Rao lower bound; Meyr-Spies method; hybrid-sign correlation; jitter error; medical ultrasound; nonnormalized correlations; normalized correlations; normalized covariance; polarity-coincidence correlation; signal correlation; signal decorrelation; signal-to-noise ratio; sum absolute differences; sum squared differences; time-delay estimator; ultrasound signal processing; Bandwidth; Delay estimation; Frequency estimation; Jitter; Kernel; Phase estimation; Radar signal processing; Radio frequency; Signal processing algorithms; Ultrasonic imaging; Algorithms; Computer Simulation; Equipment Failure Analysis; Image Enhancement; Models, Statistical; Sensitivity and Specificity; Statistics as Topic; Stochastic Processes; Ultrasonography;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on