Title :
A head motion measurement system suitable for emission computed tomography
Author :
Goldstein, Seth R. ; Daube-Witherspoon, Margaret E. ; Green, Michael V. ; Eidsath, Alec
Author_Institution :
Nat. Center for Res. Resource, Nat. Inst. of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
Abstract :
Subject motion during brain imaging studies can adversely affect the images through loss of resolution and other artifacts related to movement. The authors have developed and tested a device to measure head motion externally in real-time during emission computed tomographic (ECT) brain imaging studies, to be used eventually to correct ECT data for that motion. The system is based on optical triangulation of three miniature lights affixed to the patient´s head and viewed by two position-sensitive detectors. The computer-controlled device converts the three sets of lamp positions into rotational and translational coordinates every 0.7 seconds. When compared against a mechanical test fixture, the optical system was found to be linear and accurate with minimal crosstalk between the coordinates. In a study of two subjects, comparing the angular motions measured by the optical device and a commercially available electromagnetic motion detector, the two systems agreed well, with an root mean square (rms) difference of less than 0.6° for all rotations.
Keywords :
biomechanics; biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; brain; positron emission tomography; single photon emission computed tomography; 0.7 s; PET; SPECT; brain imaging studies; commercially available electromagnetic motion detector; computer-controlled device; emission computed tomography; head motion measurement system; mechanical test fixture; medical diagnostic imaging; miniature lights; movement-related artifacts; nuclear medicine; optical system; optical triangulation; position-sensitive detectors; resolution loss; root mean square difference; rotational coordinates; translational coordinates; Brain; Computed tomography; Electrical capacitance tomography; Head; Image resolution; Motion measurement; Optical crosstalk; Optical imaging; Optical losses; Testing; Algorithms; Artifacts; Brain; Calibration; Electromagnetics; Equipment Design; Head; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Light; Microcomputers; Movement; Optics; Rotation; Tomography, Emission-Computed; Transducers;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on