Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
The recent advances in fluorescent molecular probes, photon detection instrumentation, and photon propagation models in tissue, have facilitated the emergence of innovative molecular imaging technologies such as Fluorescence Diffuse Optical Tomography (FDOT). FDOT has already successfully been applied on its own to resolve specific molecular targets and pathways in vivo. Recent attempts have tried to integrate FDOT with structural imaging technology into a multi-modal system. This thesis is amongst the first academic-industrial partnerships to develop a hybrid X-Ray Computed Tomography/FDOT platform for small animal imaging. In this study, we focus on image reconstruction algorithms for FDOT, and consider three main research directions. First, we investigate innovative discretization techniques for FDOT, in the context of variational reconstruction methods. Our goal is to treat in a consistent manner the propagation equation, and the regularization, needed in the reconstruction algorithm. This study uses the diffusion approximation for modeling the propagation of photons in tissue. We solve the diffusion equation with a novel Finite Volumes Method that is specifically designed to be compatible with the sparsity-inducing regularization developed in the second part of this work. Our approach results in a computationally efficient implementation of the forward model. Next, we study a novel regularization approach for FDOT which is based on sparsity-promoting regularization. This approach is expected to enhance the reconstruction when the fluorescence distribution presents a sparsity pattern in a suitable representation, or after linear transformation. We propose a variational framework based on ℓp-norm penalization in order to incorporate the sparsity a priori in the inversion algorithm. We demonstrate this approach on experimental data, using computationally efficient algorithms relying on convex optimization principles. Finally, we focus on hybrid imaging systems that combine FDOT with another imaging technique. The latter is employed to acquire a high-resolution image of the anatomy of the specimen under investigation, which provides valuable information for the FDOT reconstruction. We propose a new regularization method that allows the incorporation of the anatomical information in the FDOT reconstruction. Our method is based on the concept of group sparsity, and implemented in practice using ℓ2,1-norm penalization. We extend our sparsity-inducing algorithms to this case, and study the performance of the resulting implementation on experimental data.
Andreas Pautz, Lubomír Bures, Yohei Sato
, ,