Diffuse Correlation Blood Flow Tomography Based on Conv-TransNet Model

  • Xiaojuan Zhang
  • , Wen Yan
  • , Peng Zhang
  • , Xiaogang Tong
  • , Haifeng Zhou
  • , Yu Shang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Diffuse correlation tomography (DCT) is an emerging technique for detecting diseases associated with localized abnormal perfusion from near-infrared light intensity temporal autocorrelation functions (g2(τ)). However, a critical drawback of traditional reconstruction methods is the imbalance between optical measurements and the voxels to be reconstructed. To address this issue, this paper proposes Conv-TransNet, a convolutional neural network (CNN)–Transformer hybrid model that directly maps g2(τ) data to blood flow index (BFI) images. For model training and testing, we constructed a dataset of 18,000 pairs of noise-free and noisy g2(τ) data with their corresponding BFI images. In simulation validation, the root mean squared error (RMSE) for the five types of anomalies with noisy data are 2.13%, 4.43%, 2.15%, 4.05%, and 4.39%, respectively. The MJR (misjudgment ratio)of them are close to zero. In the phantom experiments, the CONTRAST of the quasi-solid cross-shaped anomaly reached 0.59, with an MJR of 2.21%. Compared with the traditional Nth-order linearization (NL) algorithm, the average CONTRAST of the speed-varied liquid tubular anomaly increased by 0.55. These metrics also demonstrate the superior performance of our method over traditional CNN-based approaches. The experimental results indicate that the Conv-TransNet model would achieve more accurate and robust reconstruction, suggesting its potential as an alternative for blood flow imaging.

Original languageEnglish
Article number828
JournalPhotonics
Volume12
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • NL algorithm
  • blood flow index
  • convolutional neural network
  • diffuse correlation tomography
  • transformer

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