Paper
21 May 2004 Subspace-based analysis of the ERT inverse problem
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 5299, Computational Imaging II; (2004) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.523385
Event: Electronic Imaging 2004, 2004, San Jose, California, United States
Abstract
In a previous work, we proposed a source-type formulation to the electrical resistance tomography (ERT) problem. Specifically, we showed that inhomogeneities in the medium can be viewed as secondary sources embedded in the homogeneous background medium and located at positions associated with variation in electrical conductivity. Assuming a piecewise constant conductivity distribution, the support of equivalent sources is equal to the boundary of the inhomogeneity. The estimation of the anomaly shape takes the form of an inverse source-type problem. In this paper, we explore the use of subspace methods to localize the secondary equivalent sources associated with discontinuities in the conductivity distribution. Our first alternative is the multiple signal classification (MUSIC) algorithm which is commonly used in the localization of multiple sources. The idea is to project a finite collection of plausible pole (or dipole) sources onto an estimated signal subspace and select those with largest correlations. In ERT, secondary sources are excited simultaneously but in different ways, i.e. with distinct amplitude patterns, depending on the locations and amplitudes of primary sources. If the number of receivers is "large enough", different source configurations can lead to a set of observation vectors that span the data subspace. However, since sources that are spatially close to each other have highly correlated signatures, seperation of such signals becomes very difficult in the presence of noise. To overcome this problem we consider iterative MUSIC algorithms like R-MUSIC and RAP-MUSIC. These recursive algorithms pose a computational burden as they require multiple large combinatorial searches. Results obtained with these algorithms using simulated data of different conductivity patterns are presented.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mohamed Khames Ben Hadj Miled and Eric L. Miller "Subspace-based analysis of the ERT inverse problem", Proc. SPIE 5299, Computational Imaging II, (21 May 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.523385
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KEYWORDS
Inverse problems

Computer simulations

Reconstruction algorithms

Data modeling

Resistance

Signal to noise ratio

Electrodes

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