Spatial response identification enables robust experimental ultrasound computed tomography
Carlos Cueto, Lluis Guasch, Javier Cudeiro, Oscar Calderon Agudo,, Oscar Bates, George Strong, and Meng-Xing Tang

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel calibration method for ultrasound computed tomography that accurately estimates transducer parameters in a single step, improving image reconstruction quality especially in challenging high-contrast tissues.
Contribution
The authors extend spatial response identification to simultaneously estimate transducer location, orientation, and impulse response using a surrogate model, enhancing calibration robustness.
Findings
Calibration quality significantly improved over standard methods.
Reconstructed images of tissue-mimicking phantoms are more accurate.
Method effective even with high-contrast tissues like the skull.
Abstract
Ultrasound computed tomography techniques have the potential to provide clinicians with 3D, quantitative and high-resolution information of both soft and hard tissues such as the breast or the adult human brain. Their practical application requires accurate modelling of the acquisition setup: the spatial location, orientation, and impulse response of each ultrasound transducer. However, existing calibration methods fail to accurately characterise these transducers unless their size can be considered negligible when compared to the dominant wavelength, which reduces signal-to-noise ratios below usable levels in the presence of high-contrast tissues such as the skull. In this paper, we introduce a methodology that can simultaneously estimate the location, orientation, and impulse response of the ultrasound transducers in a single calibration. We do this by extending spatial response…
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