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Optimized cerebral blood flow measurement in speckle contrast optical spectroscopy via refinement of noise calibration

  • California Institute of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Speckle contrast optical spectroscopy (SCOS) offers a noninvasive and cost-effective method for monitoring cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, extracting accurate CBF from SCOS necessitates precise noise pre-calibration. Errors from this can degrade CBF measurement fidelity, particularly when the overall signal level is low. Such errors primarily stem from residual speckle contrast associated with camera and shot noise, whose fluctuations exhibit a temporal structure that mimics cerebral blood volume (CBV) waveforms. We propose an optimization-based framework that performs an adaptive refinement of noise calibration, mitigating the CBV-mimicking artifacts by reducing the CBF-CBV waveform correlation. Validated on 10 human subjects, our approach effectively lowered the signal threshold for reliable CBF signal from 97 to 26 electrons per pixel for a 1920 × 1200 pixels SCOS system. This improvement enables more accurate and robust CBF measurements in SCOS, especially at large source-detector (S-D) distances for deeper tissue interrogation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5382-5385
Number of pages4
JournalOptics Letters
Volume50
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2025

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