Non-invasive and noise-robust light focusing using confocal wavefront shaping
Dror Aizik, Anat Levin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a noise-robust, non-invasive wavefront shaping method using confocal modulation to focus light inside scattering tissue, enabling high-SNR imaging of fluorescent neurons without added beads.
Contribution
It proposes a novel confocal wavefront shaping technique that improves noise robustness and allows tissue-native feedback for deep imaging.
Findings
Successfully imaged EGFP labeled neurons in thick tissue
Achieved high SNR focusing without fluorescent beads
Demonstrated robustness against scattering and noise
Abstract
Wavefront-shaping is a promising approach for imaging fluorescent targets deep inside scattering tissue despite strong aberrations. It enables focusing an incoming illumination into a single spot inside tissue, as well as correcting the outgoing light scattered from the tissue, by modulating the incoming and/or outgoing wavefronts. Previously, wavefront shaping modulations have been successively estimated using feedback from strong fluorescent beads, which have been manually added to a sample. However, ideally, such feedback should be provided by the fluorescent components of the tissue itself, whose emission is orders of magnitude weaker than the one provided by beads. When a low number of photons is spread over multiple sensor pixels, the image is highly susceptible to noise, and the feedback signal required for previous algorithms cannot be detected. In this work, we suggest a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRandom lasers and scattering media · Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques · Photoacoustic and Ultrasonic Imaging
