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Intrinsic signal detection of an evoked response with a low-cost scanning laser ophthalmoscope

A number of optical modalities exist for the imaging of retina structures, but no clinical devices exist for optically-based functional imaging of the retina. This paper reports on a device and on the image and signal processing techniques that were developed to perform functional image in mammalian...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soliz, P., Barriga, E.S., Schallek, J., Ts'o, D., Davis, H.
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
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Summary:A number of optical modalities exist for the imaging of retina structures, but no clinical devices exist for optically-based functional imaging of the retina. This paper reports on a device and on the image and signal processing techniques that were developed to perform functional image in mammalian retinas. These investigators first introduced a flood illuminated approach for functional imaging in 2002. That device required extensive measures, including an expensive thermal-electric cooled CCD camera, to minimize the noise in order to detect a signal with a magnitude of about 1.0 percent signal above the noise floor. The system designed and developed for this project uses low-cost optical and electronic components and low-cost lasers for illumination. The penalty paid is a device where noise reduction techniques must be employed to overcome the low signal-to-noise (SNR) in the resulting images. This paper reports on the successful application of a functional scanning laser ophthalmoscope for imaging the cat retina. Temporal and spatial averaging was used to extract a signal that is nominally three to five percent above the average signal.
ISSN:1063-7125
DOI:10.1109/CBMS.2009.5255344