2017
DOI: 10.1109/tmi.2016.2617873
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The Impact of Anisotropy on the Accuracy of Conductivity Imaging: A Quantitative Validation Study

Abstract: We present a quantitative validation study to assess the accuracy of low-frequency conductivity imaging methods, based on a testing current measured using Current Density Imaging (CDI). We tested the proposed procedure to study the influence of tissue anisotropy on the accuracy of conductivity reconstruction methods, using a finite element model of anisotropic brain tissue. Simulations were carried out for three different levels of tissue anisotropy to compare the results obtained by our recently developed ani… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…As noted above, the Fréchet derivative terms in ( 14) have three components. If ICDI data is in the form of Jm , then the first two components are used in (14). If ICDI data is in the form of Jm , then only the first component of those terms is used in (14).…”
Section: The Fréchet Derivativementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As noted above, the Fréchet derivative terms in ( 14) have three components. If ICDI data is in the form of Jm , then the first two components are used in (14). If ICDI data is in the form of Jm , then only the first component of those terms is used in (14).…”
Section: The Fréchet Derivativementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Joy et al [12] and Lee [13] independently discovered a simple explicit reconstruction formula which uses two transversal J measurements and determines the σ up to a multiplicative constant. In [6,14], this method was validated by 3D phantoms and experimental data.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To avoid potential errors caused by segmentation faults, several methods have been proposed to directly estimate the tissue dielectric properties based on anatomical images (e.g. Serralles et al 2020, Hampe et al 2019, Ropella & Noll 2017, Elsaid et al 2017, Tuch et al 2001. The water content calculated from T1-weighted MR scans is modeled using a monotonic function to estimate the conductivity of major brain tissues (Michel et al 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The anisotropic conductivity distribution of body tissues could have a significant influence on the pathways of current flows, which have been studied in the inverse modeling of Electroencephalography/Magnetoencephalography . To our knowledge, the existing research that considers anisotropy in EIT has been concentrating on the theoretical uniqueness of the inverse problem and numerical forward modeling based on a conductivity tensor . Until now, previous work on EIT has not sufficiently investigated the influence of current frequency on the tissue anisotropy.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12 To our knowledge, the existing research that considers anisotropy in EIT has been concentrating on the theoretical uniqueness of the inverse problem [13][14][15][16] and numerical forward modeling [17][18][19] based on a conductivity tensor. 20 Until now, previous work on EIT has not sufficiently investigated the influence of current frequency on the tissue anisotropy. The goal of this work is to gain deeper insight into the frequency-dependent characteristics of tissue anisotropy and preliminarily validate the feasibility of multifrequency electrical impedance tomography (mfEIT) in reconstructing a frequencydependent anisotropic object.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%