Title :
P1A-4 Model-Based Pulse Detection for 3D Ultrasound Computer Tomography
Author :
Schwarzenberg, G.F. ; Weber, M. ; Hopp, T. ; Ruiter, N.V.
Author_Institution :
Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe
Abstract :
At Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe a 3D ultrasound computer tomograph (USCT) for breast cancer diagnosis is currently under development. For many applications, i.e. reconstruction of speed of sound maps, signal denoising,signal compression and calibration, it is necessary to detect pulses and their parameters (center frequency, bandwidth factor, time of arrival, phase and amplitude) accurately and robustly. The pulse detection is demanding due to low signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) caused by unfocused pulses from single emitters. Besides that angle dependent pulse shapes result in ultrasonic echoes which are similar in their center frequency but vary strongly in their bandwidth factor. Additionally, in sum 3.5 million A-scans (20 GB) are acquired, so that the pulse detection has to be fast and efficient. This is achieved by using a fast pre-classifler in order to separate the ultrasonic echoes from the non-white system noise of our system. The detected echoes are then passed individually to a parameter estimation method to determine pulse parameters accurately. An analysis of several classifiers resulted in an alternating decision tree which is both fast and accurate. Classification performance of 95% could be achieved as well as robust parameter estimation with non-white system noise if the SNR is larger than 3 dB. A comparative image reconstruction resulted in significantly sharper images.
Keywords :
acoustic tomography; biomedical ultrasonics; cancer; computerised tomography; image reconstruction; medical image processing; patient diagnosis; 3D ultrasound computer tomography; Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe; breast cancer diagnosis; calibration; image reconstruction; model-based pulse detection; signal compression; signal denoising; signal-to-noise ratio; sound map reconstruction; ultrasonic echoes; Acoustic noise; Application software; Bandwidth; Breast cancer; Frequency; Image reconstruction; Parameter estimation; Signal to noise ratio; Tomography; Ultrasonic imaging;
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium, 2007. IEEE
Conference_Location :
New York, NY
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1384-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1051-0117
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2007.315