Quantitative evaluation of high-density diffuse optical tomography: In vivo resolution and mapping performance

Brian R. White, Joseph P. Culver

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

114 Scopus citations

Abstract

Despite the unique brain imaging capabilities and advantages of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), including portability and comprehensive hemodynamic measurement, widespread acceptance in the neuroimaging community has been hampered by low spatial resolution and image localization errors. While recent technical developments such as high-density diffuse optical tomography (HD-DOT) have, in principle, been shown to have superior in silico image quality, the majority of optical imaging studies are still conducted with sparse fNIRS arrays, perhaps partially because the performance increases of HD-DOT appear incremental. Without a quantitative comparative analysis between HD-DOT and fNIRS, using both simulation and in vivo neuroimaging, the implications of the new HD-DOT technology have been difficult to judge. We present a quantitative comparison of HD-DOT and two commonly used fNIRS geometries using (1) standard metrics of image quality, (2) simulated brain mapping tasks, and (3) in vivo visual cortex mapping results in adult humans. The results show that better resolution and lower positional errors are achieved with HD-DOT and that these improvements provide a substantial advancement in neuroimaging capability. In particular, we demonstrate that HD-DOT enables detailed phaseencoded retinotopic mapping, while sparse arrays are limited to imaging individual block-design visual stimuli.

Original languageEnglish
Article number026006
JournalJournal of biomedical optics
Volume15
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2010

Keywords

  • Biomedical optics
  • Diffuse optical tomography
  • Diffusion
  • Image quality
  • Imaging systems
  • Medical imaging
  • Optical neuroimaging

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