Another front cover for our staff
In the April edition of IEEE Transactions on
Biomedical Engineering an image from the paper
Truncated Total Least Squares: A New Regularization
Method for the Solution of ECG Inverse Problems by Shou, G.; Xia, L.; Jiang, M.; Wei, Q.; Liu, F.; Crozier, S.
made the front cover.
Below is the abstract
The reconstruction of epicardial potentials (EPs) from
body surface potentials (BSPs) can be characterized as an ill-posed
inverse problem which generally requires a regularized numerical
solution. Two kinds of errors/noise: geometric errors and measurement
errors exist in the ECG inverse problem and make the solution of such
problem more difficulty. In particular, geometric errors will directly
affect the calculation of transfer matrix A in the linear system
equation AX = B. In this paper, we have applied the truncated total
least squares (TTLS) method to reconstruct EPs from BSPs. This method
accounts for the noise/errors on both sides of the system equation and
treats geometric errors in a new fashion. The algorithm is tested using
a realistically shaped heart-lung-torso model with inhomogeneous
conductivities. The h-adaptive boundary element method [h-BEM, a BEM
mesh adaptation scheme which starts from preset meshes and then refines
(adds/removes) grid with fixed order of interpolation function and
prescribed numerical accuracy] is used for the forward modeling and the
TTLS is applied for inverse solutions and its performance is also
compared with conventional regularization approaches such as Tikhonov
and truncated single value decomposition (TSVD) with zeroth-, first-,
and second-order. The simulation results demonstrate that TTLS can
obtain similar results in the situation of measurement noise only but
performs better than Tikhonov and TSVD methods where geometric errors
are involved, and that the zeroth-order regularization is the optimal
choice for the ECG inverse problem. This investigation suggests that
TTLS is able to robustly reconstruct EPs from BSPs and is a promising
alternative method for the solution of ECG inverse problems.
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Volume: 55 Issue: 4 April 2008
Page(s): 1327-1335 |
|
Front cover showing epicardial
potential distributions reconstructed from body surface potentials
 |