Current Publications

Journal Publications
since 2022

Recent Journal Publications

[154730]
Title: Simultaneous imaging of widely differing particle concentrations in MPI: problem statement and algorithmic proposal for improvement.
Written by: M. Boberg, N. Gdaniec, P. Szwargulski, F. Werner, M. Möddel, and T. Knopp
in: <em>Physics in Medicine & Biology</em>. April (2021).
Volume: <strong>66</strong>. Number: (9),
on pages: 095004
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/abf202
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01364
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www] [BibTex]

Note: article, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tomographic imaging technique for determining the spatial distribution of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Current MPI systems are capable of imaging iron masses over a wide dynamic range of more than four orders of magnitude. In theory, this range could be further increased using adaptive amplifiers, which prevent signal clipping. While this applies to a single sample, the dynamic range is severely limited if several samples with different concentrations or strongly inhomogeneous particle distributions are considered. One scenario that occurs quite frequently in pre-clinical applications is that a highly concentrated tracer bolus in the vascular system shadows nearby organs with lower effective tracer concentrations. The root cause of the problem is the ill-posedness of the MPI imaging operator, which requires regularization for stable reconstruction. In this work, we introduce a simple two-step algorithm that increases the dynamic range by a factor of four. Furthermore, the algorithm enables spatially adaptive regularization, i.e. highly concentrated signals can be reconstructed with maximum spatial resolution, while low concentrated signals are strongly regularized to prevent noise amplification.

Conference Abstracts and Proceedings
since 2022

Recent Conference Abstracts and Proceedings

[154730]
Title: Simultaneous imaging of widely differing particle concentrations in MPI: problem statement and algorithmic proposal for improvement.
Written by: M. Boberg, N. Gdaniec, P. Szwargulski, F. Werner, M. Möddel, and T. Knopp
in: <em>Physics in Medicine & Biology</em>. April (2021).
Volume: <strong>66</strong>. Number: (9),
on pages: 095004
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/abf202
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01364
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: article, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tomographic imaging technique for determining the spatial distribution of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Current MPI systems are capable of imaging iron masses over a wide dynamic range of more than four orders of magnitude. In theory, this range could be further increased using adaptive amplifiers, which prevent signal clipping. While this applies to a single sample, the dynamic range is severely limited if several samples with different concentrations or strongly inhomogeneous particle distributions are considered. One scenario that occurs quite frequently in pre-clinical applications is that a highly concentrated tracer bolus in the vascular system shadows nearby organs with lower effective tracer concentrations. The root cause of the problem is the ill-posedness of the MPI imaging operator, which requires regularization for stable reconstruction. In this work, we introduce a simple two-step algorithm that increases the dynamic range by a factor of four. Furthermore, the algorithm enables spatially adaptive regularization, i.e. highly concentrated signals can be reconstructed with maximum spatial resolution, while low concentrated signals are strongly regularized to prevent noise amplification.

Publications

Journal Publications
since 2014

Journal Publications

[154730]
Title: Simultaneous imaging of widely differing particle concentrations in MPI: problem statement and algorithmic proposal for improvement.
Written by: M. Boberg, N. Gdaniec, P. Szwargulski, F. Werner, M. Möddel, and T. Knopp
in: <em>Physics in Medicine & Biology</em>. April (2021).
Volume: <strong>66</strong>. Number: (9),
on pages: 095004
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/abf202
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01364
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www] [BibTex]

Note: article, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tomographic imaging technique for determining the spatial distribution of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Current MPI systems are capable of imaging iron masses over a wide dynamic range of more than four orders of magnitude. In theory, this range could be further increased using adaptive amplifiers, which prevent signal clipping. While this applies to a single sample, the dynamic range is severely limited if several samples with different concentrations or strongly inhomogeneous particle distributions are considered. One scenario that occurs quite frequently in pre-clinical applications is that a highly concentrated tracer bolus in the vascular system shadows nearby organs with lower effective tracer concentrations. The root cause of the problem is the ill-posedness of the MPI imaging operator, which requires regularization for stable reconstruction. In this work, we introduce a simple two-step algorithm that increases the dynamic range by a factor of four. Furthermore, the algorithm enables spatially adaptive regularization, i.e. highly concentrated signals can be reconstructed with maximum spatial resolution, while low concentrated signals are strongly regularized to prevent noise amplification.

Conference Abstracts and Proceedings
since 2014

Conference Abstracts and Proceedings

[154730]
Title: Simultaneous imaging of widely differing particle concentrations in MPI: problem statement and algorithmic proposal for improvement.
Written by: M. Boberg, N. Gdaniec, P. Szwargulski, F. Werner, M. Möddel, and T. Knopp
in: <em>Physics in Medicine & Biology</em>. April (2021).
Volume: <strong>66</strong>. Number: (9),
on pages: 095004
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/abf202
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01364
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: article, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tomographic imaging technique for determining the spatial distribution of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Current MPI systems are capable of imaging iron masses over a wide dynamic range of more than four orders of magnitude. In theory, this range could be further increased using adaptive amplifiers, which prevent signal clipping. While this applies to a single sample, the dynamic range is severely limited if several samples with different concentrations or strongly inhomogeneous particle distributions are considered. One scenario that occurs quite frequently in pre-clinical applications is that a highly concentrated tracer bolus in the vascular system shadows nearby organs with lower effective tracer concentrations. The root cause of the problem is the ill-posedness of the MPI imaging operator, which requires regularization for stable reconstruction. In this work, we introduce a simple two-step algorithm that increases the dynamic range by a factor of four. Furthermore, the algorithm enables spatially adaptive regularization, i.e. highly concentrated signals can be reconstructed with maximum spatial resolution, while low concentrated signals are strongly regularized to prevent noise amplification.

Publications Pre-dating the Institute

Publications
2007-2013

Old Publications

[154730]
Title: Simultaneous imaging of widely differing particle concentrations in MPI: problem statement and algorithmic proposal for improvement.
Written by: M. Boberg, N. Gdaniec, P. Szwargulski, F. Werner, M. Möddel, and T. Knopp
in: <em>Physics in Medicine & Biology</em>. April (2021).
Volume: <strong>66</strong>. Number: (9),
on pages: 095004
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/abf202
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01364
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: article, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tomographic imaging technique for determining the spatial distribution of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Current MPI systems are capable of imaging iron masses over a wide dynamic range of more than four orders of magnitude. In theory, this range could be further increased using adaptive amplifiers, which prevent signal clipping. While this applies to a single sample, the dynamic range is severely limited if several samples with different concentrations or strongly inhomogeneous particle distributions are considered. One scenario that occurs quite frequently in pre-clinical applications is that a highly concentrated tracer bolus in the vascular system shadows nearby organs with lower effective tracer concentrations. The root cause of the problem is the ill-posedness of the MPI imaging operator, which requires regularization for stable reconstruction. In this work, we introduce a simple two-step algorithm that increases the dynamic range by a factor of four. Furthermore, the algorithm enables spatially adaptive regularization, i.e. highly concentrated signals can be reconstructed with maximum spatial resolution, while low concentrated signals are strongly regularized to prevent noise amplification.

Open Access Publications

Journal Publications
since 2014

Open Access Publications

[154730]
Title: Simultaneous imaging of widely differing particle concentrations in MPI: problem statement and algorithmic proposal for improvement.
Written by: M. Boberg, N. Gdaniec, P. Szwargulski, F. Werner, M. Möddel, and T. Knopp
in: <em>Physics in Medicine & Biology</em>. April (2021).
Volume: <strong>66</strong>. Number: (9),
on pages: 095004
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/abf202
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01364
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www] [BibTex]

Note: article, artifact, openaccess

Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tomographic imaging technique for determining the spatial distribution of superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Current MPI systems are capable of imaging iron masses over a wide dynamic range of more than four orders of magnitude. In theory, this range could be further increased using adaptive amplifiers, which prevent signal clipping. While this applies to a single sample, the dynamic range is severely limited if several samples with different concentrations or strongly inhomogeneous particle distributions are considered. One scenario that occurs quite frequently in pre-clinical applications is that a highly concentrated tracer bolus in the vascular system shadows nearby organs with lower effective tracer concentrations. The root cause of the problem is the ill-posedness of the MPI imaging operator, which requires regularization for stable reconstruction. In this work, we introduce a simple two-step algorithm that increases the dynamic range by a factor of four. Furthermore, the algorithm enables spatially adaptive regularization, i.e. highly concentrated signals can be reconstructed with maximum spatial resolution, while low concentrated signals are strongly regularized to prevent noise amplification.