High-throughput volumetric adaptive optical imaging using compressed time-reversal matrix
Hojun Lee, Seokchan Yoon, Pascal Loohuis, Jin Hee Hong, Sungsam Kang,, and Wonshik Choi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a rapid volumetric adaptive optical imaging method using a time-reversal matrix, enabling real-time, high-resolution imaging of mouse brain tissue with significantly reduced measurement time.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel aberration correction algorithm for the time-reversal matrix, achieving comparable image quality with only 2% of the basis and enabling real-time, high-throughput volumetric imaging.
Findings
Achieved 80 Hz frame rate for real-time imaging.
Recorded a 128x128x125 micron volume in 3.58 seconds.
Corrected tissue aberrations at each 1-micron depth.
Abstract
Deep-tissue optical imaging suffers from the reduction of resolving power due to tissue-induced optical aberrations and multiple scattering noise. Reflection matrix approaches recording the maps of backscattered waves for all the possible orthogonal input channels have provided formidable solutions for removing severe aberrations and recovering the ideal diffraction-limited spatial resolution without relying on fluorescence labeling and guide stars. However, measuring the full input-output response of the tissue specimen is time-consuming, making the real-time image acquisition difficult. Here, we present the use of a time-reversal matrix, instead of the reflection matrix, for fast high-resolution volumetric imaging of a mouse brain. The time-reversal matrix reduces two-way problem to one-way problem, which effectively relieves the requirement for the coverage of input channels. Using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotoacoustic and Ultrasonic Imaging · Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques · Advanced Optical Sensing Technologies
