22 research outputs found
A persistent homology-based topological loss function for multi-class CNN segmentation of cardiac MRI
With respect to spatial overlap, CNN-based segmentation of short axis
cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) images has achieved a level of
performance consistent with inter observer variation. However, conventional
training procedures frequently depend on pixel-wise loss functions, limiting
optimisation with respect to extended or global features. As a result, inferred
segmentations can lack spatial coherence, including spurious connected
components or holes. Such results are implausible, violating the anticipated
topology of image segments, which is frequently known a priori. Addressing this
challenge, published work has employed persistent homology, constructing
topological loss functions for the evaluation of image segments against an
explicit prior. Building a richer description of segmentation topology by
considering all possible labels and label pairs, we extend these losses to the
task of multi-class segmentation. These topological priors allow us to resolve
all topological errors in a subset of 150 examples from the ACDC short axis CMR
training data set, without sacrificing overlap performance.Comment: To be presented at the STACOM workshop at MICCAI 202
Advances and new applications using the acousto-optic effect in optical fibers
This work presents a short review of the current research on the acousto-optic mechanism applied to optical fibers. The role of the piezoelectric element and the acousto-optic modulator in the excitation of flexural and longitudinal acoustic modes in the frequency range up to 1.2 MHz is highlighted. A combination of the finite elements and the transfer matrix methods is used to simulate the interaction of the waves with Bragg and long period gratings. Results show a very good agreement with experimental data. Recent applications such as the writing of gratings under the acoustic excitation and a novel viscometer sensor based on the acousto-optic mechanism are discussed
42.8-Gb/s RZ-DQPSK transmission with FBG-based in-line dispersion compensation
Phase ripple impairments induced through cascaded fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) are discussed for 42.8-Gb/s transmission. We show the feasibility of transmission over 1140 km (12 times 95 km) using return-to-zero differential quadrature phase-shift keying modulation and FBG-only dispersion compensation. We further compare FBGs with dispersion-compensating fiber for dispersion compensation and analyze the influence of wavelength detuning
42.8-Gb/s RZ-DQPSK transmission with FBG-based in-line dispersion compensation
Phase ripple impairments induced through cascaded fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) are discussed for 42.8-Gb/s transmission. We show the feasibility of transmission over 1140 km (12 times 95 km) using return-to-zero differential quadrature phase-shift keying modulation and FBG-only dispersion compensation. We further compare FBGs with dispersion-compensating fiber for dispersion compensation and analyze the influence of wavelength detuning
Fiber-modes and fiber-anisotropy characterization using low-coherence interferometry
An optical low-coherence interferometry technique has been used to simultaneously resolve the mode profile and to measure the intermodal dispersion of guided modes of a few-mode fiber. Measurements are performed using short samples of fiber (about 50 cm). There is no need for a complex mode-conversion technique to reach a high interference visibility. Four LP mode groups of the few-mode fiber are resolved. Experimental results and numerical simulations show that the ellipticity of the fiber core leads to a distinct splitting of the degenerate high-order modes in group index. For the first time, to the best of our knowledge, it has been demonstrated that degenerate LP11 modes are much more sensitive to core shape variations than the fundamental modes and that intermodal dispersion of high-order degenerate modes can be used for characterizing the anisotropy of an optical waveguide