Characterisation of the Intel RealSense D415 Stereo Depth Camera for Motion-Corrected CT Perfusion Imaging
Mahdieh Dashtbani Moghari, Philip Noonan, David Henry, Roger R Fulton,, Noel Young, Krystal Moore, Andrew Evanns, Andre Kyme

TL;DR
This study evaluates the Intel RealSense D415 stereo camera's accuracy for motion correction in cerebral CT perfusion imaging, demonstrating promising results that could enhance retrospective motion correction in stroke imaging.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive characterization of the D415 camera's motion estimation accuracy for potential use in CT perfusion motion correction.
Findings
Stable jitter and thermal pose drift within 1.5 mm and 0.5° during 10-20 min
Mean pose estimation error ≤ 1.24 mm and 0.68° for static poses
RMSE ≤ 2.72 mm and 0.55° for human head motion tracking
Abstract
Even for short protocols (<1 min), head movement can compromise accurate haemodynamic modelling of cerebral CT perfusion (CTP) imaging in acute stroke. Frame-to-frame registration is the most common form of retrospective correction but neglects the fact that motion is continuous, not discrete. By contrast, external tracking devices provide continuous motion monitoring and thereby the opportunity to fully correct the acquired data for motion. The aim of this study was to characterise the Intel D415 stereo depth camera, a compact low-cost markerless tracking device, in terms of its suitability for retrospective CTP motion correction. The results showed that jitter was stable, and thermally-induced pose drift was {\le} 1.5 mm and {\le} 0.5{\deg} during the first 10-20 min, after which it also became stable. For static poses, the mean difference between the Intel D415 motion estimates and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Imaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced X-ray and CT Imaging · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications
