Deep Image Prior for Sparse-sampling Photoacoustic Microscopy

2020 
Photoacoustic microscopy (PAM) is an emerging method for imaging both structural and functional information without the need for exogenous contrast agents. However, state-of-the-art PAM faces a tradeoff between imaging speed and spatial sampling density within the same field-of-view (FOV). Limited by the pulsed laser's repetition rate, the imaging speed is inversely proportional to the total number of effective pixels. To cover the same FOV in a shorter amount of time with the same PAM hardware, there is currently no other option than to decrease spatial sampling density (i.e., sparse sampling). Deep learning methods have recently been used to improve sparsely sampled PAM images; however, these methods often require time-consuming pre-training and a large training dataset that has fully sampled, co-registered ground truth. In this paper, we propose using a method known as "deep image prior" to improve the image quality of sparsely sampled PAM images. The network does not need prior learning or fully sampled ground truth, making its implementation more flexible and much quicker. Our results show promising improvement in PA vasculature images with as few as 2% of the effective pixels. Our deep image prior approach produces results that outperform interpolation methods and can be readily translated to other high-speed, sparse-sampling imaging modalities.
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