Enhancing multichannel laser-doppler vibrometry signals with application to (carotid-femoral) pulse transit time estimation
Pulse-wave velocity (PWV) can be used to quantify arterial stiffness, allowing for a diagnosis of this condition. Multi-beam laser-doppler vibrometry offers a cheap, noninvasive and user-friendly alternative to measuring PWV, and its feasibility has been previously demonstrated in the H2020 project...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Pulse-wave velocity (PWV) can be used to quantify
arterial stiffness, allowing for a diagnosis of this condition.
Multi-beam laser-doppler vibrometry offers a cheap, noninvasive
and user-friendly alternative to measuring PWV, and
its feasibility has been previously demonstrated in the H2020
project CARDIS. The two handpieces of the prototype CARDIS
device measure skin displacement above main arteries at two
different sites, yielding an estimate of the pulse-transit time
(PTT) and, consequently, PWV. The presence of multiple
beams (channels) on each handpiece can be used to enhance
the underlying signal, improving the quality of the signal
for PTT estimation and further analysis. We propose two
methods for multi-channel LDV data processing: beamforming
and beamforming-driven ICA. Beamforming is done by an
SNR-weighted linear combination of the time-aligned channels,
where the SNR is blindly estimated from the signal statistics.
ICA uses the beamformer to resolve its inherent permutation
and scale ambiguities. Both methods yield a single enhanced
signal at each handpiece, where spurious peaks in the individual
channels as well as stochastic noise are well suppressed in
the output. Using the enhanced signals yields individual PTT
estimates with a low spread compared to the baseline approach.
While the enhancement is introduced in the context of PTT
estimation, the approaches can be used to enhance signals in
other biomedical applications of multi-channel LDV as well. |
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ISSN: | 1557-170X 1558-4615 |