2,969 research outputs found
Comparación de la calidad óptica de lentes intraoculares esféricas y asféricas en presencia de errores de posición
El cristalino de un ojo sano es transparente y actúa como una lente de
focal o poder refractivo variable. A medida que envejecemos, las
proteínas en el cristalino comienzan a descomponerse y éste se torna
progresivamente más opaco formándose una catarata. El único
tratamiento para una catarata es la implantación de lentes intraoculares
(LIO) a través de facoemulsificación. Las LIOs monofocales implantadas
pueden ser de diseño esférico o de diseño asférico.Este trabajo consiste
en comparar en banco óptico el comportamiento de una LIO monofocal
esférica y el de una asférica en presencia de descentramiento. Para ello
se utilizaran métricas de calidad, como la función de punto extendido
(PSF) y la función de transferencia de modulación (MTF) del sistema. Se
evaluará cuál de los dos diseños presenta mejor calidad óptica tanto en
condiciones de buen centrado de la LIO como con descentramiento. De
este modo se podrá establecer la robustez de cada diseño frente al
desplazamiento.Una vez analizados todos los datos, se aprecia con
claridad que la mejor imagen que podemos obtener en una posición
centrada se consigue mediante la lente de diseño asférico, mientras que
en presencia de descentramiento, la lente esférica presenta claramente
una mayor robustez
Light in scattering media: active control and the exploration of intensity correlations
When light encounters scattering materials such as biological tissue, white paint or clouds, it
gets randomly scattered in all directions, which traditionally has been seen as a barrier for imaging
techniques (reducing their resolution) or sensing, due to the reduction of the penetration depth of
light. However, in recent years it has been shown that scattering might not necessarily be an
impediment, and that the knowledge of the properties of multiple scattering can be indeed useful
for imaging, sensing and other applications.
In the first part of this thesis (Chapters 2 to 5) we study the implications of manipulating the
light incident on a multiply scattering material. We experimentally show how by actively controlling
the output light of a bad quality laser we manage to not only improve its beam quality, but also in an
energy-efficient way, in comparison with traditional methods. In a different experiment presented
in this thesis, we show how the active control of the light incident on a scattering material can be
useful to improve sensing through scattering media, by means of increasing the transmission and
energy deposited inside (Chapter 5).
In the final part of the thesis we present the first experimental observation of intensity correla-
tions between transmitted and reflected patterns from a scattering material (Chapter 6), exploring
how it depends on the parameters of the scattering medium. In the last part of the thesis (Chapter
7) we present a new imaging technique based on the use of the intensity correlations described in
the previous chapter, opening new possibilities to non-invasive imaging through highly scattering
materials
Inversion of multiconfiguration complex EMI data with minimum gradient support regularization: A case study
Frequency-domain electromagnetic instruments allow the collection of data in
different configurations, that is, varying the intercoil spacing, the
frequency, and the height above the ground. Their handy size makes these tools
very practical for near-surface characterization in many fields of
applications, for example, precision agriculture, pollution assessments, and
shallow geological investigations. To this end, the inversion of either the
real (in-phase) or the imaginary (quadrature) component of the signal has
already been studied. Furthermore, in many situations, a regularization scheme
retrieving smooth solutions is blindly applied, without taking into account the
prior available knowledge. The present work discusses an algorithm for the
inversion of the complex signal in its entirety, as well as a regularization
method that promotes the sparsity of the reconstructed electrical conductivity
distribution. This regularization strategy incorporates a minimum gradient
support stabilizer into a truncated generalized singular value decomposition
scheme. The results of the implementation of this sparsity-enhancing
regularization at each step of a damped Gauss-Newton inversion algorithm (based
on a nonlinear forward model) are compared with the solutions obtained via a
standard smooth stabilizer. An approach for estimating the depth of
investigation, that is, the maximum depth that can be investigated by a chosen
instrument configuration in a particular experimental setting is also
discussed. The effectiveness and limitations of the whole inversion algorithm
are demonstrated on synthetic and real data sets
Blind Ghost Imaging
Ghost imaging is an unconventional optical imaging technique that
reconstructs the shape of an object combining the measurement of two signals:
one that interacted with the object, but without any spatial information, the
other containing spatial information, but that never interacted with the
object. Ghost imaging is a very flexible technique, that has been generalized
to the single-photon regime, to the time domain, to infrared and terahertz
frequencies, and many more conditions. Here we demonstrate that ghost imaging
can be performed without ever knowing the patterns illuminating the object, but
using patterns correlated with them, doesn't matter how weakly. As an
experimental proof we exploit the recently discovered correlation between the
reflected and transmitted light from a scattering layer, and reconstruct the
image of an object hidden behind a scattering layer using only the reflected
light, which never interacts with the object. This method opens new
perspectives for non-invasive imaging behind or within turbid media.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Anti-Gauss cubature rules with applications to Fredholm integral equations on the square
The purpose of this paper is to develop the anti-Gauss cubature rule for
approximating integrals defined on the square whose integrand function may have
algebraic singularities at the boundaries. An application of such a rule to the
numerical solution of second-kind Fredholm integral equations is also explored.
The stability, convergence, and conditioning of the proposed Nystr\"om-type
method are studied. The numerical solution of the resulting dense linear system
is also investigated and several numerical tests are presented
Unsupervised online clustering and detection algorithms using crowdsourced data for malaria diagnosis
© . This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Crowdsourced data in science might be severely error-prone due to the inexperience of annotators participating in the project. In this work, we present a procedure to detect specific structures in an image given tags provided by multiple annotators and collected through a crowdsourcing methodology. The procedure consists of two stages based on the Expectation–Maximization (EM) algorithm, one for clustering and the other one for detection, and it gracefully combines data coming from annotators with unknown reliability in an unsupervised manner. An online implementation of the approach is also presented that is well suited to crowdsourced streaming data. Comprehensive experimental results with real data from the MalariaSpot project are also included.Peer ReviewedPreprin
Unsupervised ensemble classification with correlated decision agents
© 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Decision-making procedures when a set of individual binary labels is processed to produce a unique joint decision can be approached modeling the individual labels as multivariate independent Bernoulli random variables. This probabilistic model allows an unsupervised solution using EM-based algorithms, which basically estimate the distribution model parameters and take a joint decision using a Maximum a Posteriori criterion. These methods usually assume that individual decision agents are conditionally independent, an assumption that might not hold in practical setups. Therefore, in this work we formulate and solve the decision-making problem using an EM-based approach but assuming correlated decision agents. Improved performance is obtained on synthetic and real datasets, compared to classical and state-of-the-art algorithms.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Synthesis of MgB4O7:Dy3+and Thermoluminescent Characteristics at Low Doses of Beta Radiation
The synthesis and thermoluminescent characteristics of dysprosium-doped MgB4O7 are analyzed. The phosphor at different concentrations (0, 0.1, 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 mol%) of the dopant was prepared by the solution-assisted method. The magnesium borate compound was confirmed by X-ray diffraction. The annealing and dopant concentrations effects on the crystalline matrix were investigated. The highest thermoluminescent sensitivity was found with 450°C of annealing temperature and at high Dy3+ concentration too. The un-doped MgB4O7 phosphor shows a broad glow curve which peaked at 199°C and about 306 °C. Introducing Dy3+ dopant in the matrix that behavior was strongly changed. The wide glow curve shows three glow peaks; two small shoulders at 124 and 195 °C, and a highest peak between 323 and 336 °C temperature range. A large linear dose-response (5 – 2000 mGy) beta dose was obtained. The complex glow curves were deconvolved and the kinetics parameters were determined considering the general order kinetics model
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