Compressed Beamforming Applied to B-Mode Ultrasound Imaging
Noam Wagner, Yonina C. Eldar, Arie Feuer, Zvi Friedman

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel compressed beamforming method for B-mode ultrasound imaging that significantly reduces data acquisition rates while enhancing signal quality, enabling efficient imaging with lower power and hardware requirements.
Contribution
It presents a new approach combining compressed sensing and beamforming to improve low-rate ultrasound sampling and image quality.
Findings
Achieved nearly eight-fold reduction in sample-rate.
Successfully imaged cardiac tissue perturbations.
Enhanced SNR of low-rate samples through compressed beamforming.
Abstract
Emerging sonography techniques often imply increasing in the number of transducer elements involved in the imaging process. Consequently, larger amounts of data must be acquired and processed by the beamformer. The significant growth in the amounts of data effects both machinery size and power consumption. Within the classical sampling framework, state of the art systems reduce processing rates by exploiting the bandpass bandwidth of the detected signals. It has been recently shown, that a much more significant sample-rate reduction may be obtained, by treating ultrasound signals within the Finite Rate of Innovation framework. These ideas follow the spirit of Xampling, which combines classic methods from sampling theory with recent developments in Compressed Sensing. Applying such low-rate sampling schemes to individual transducer elements, which detect energy reflected from biological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound Imaging and Elastography · Sparse and Compressive Sensing Techniques · Ultrasonics and Acoustic Wave Propagation
