Title
In vivo optical molecular imaging: principles and signal processing issues
Abstract
In vivo optical molecular imaging involves the use of light emitting tracers combined with sophisticated sensing modalities to perform in vivo imaging of genetic and molecular information. In contrast to the classical diagnostic imaging tools which image the end effects of the diseases, optical molecular imaging could enhance our knowledge of biological phenomena, monitor genetic expression and the alteration of cells, and lead to earlier detection of diseases. With the development of exotic molecular probes with easily detectable bioluminescence and fluorescence labels, optical molecular imaging has emerged as an important new field within biomedical imaging. This paper reviews this state-of-the-art imaging technology and signal processing issues to monitor molecular and cellular events in living organisms.
Year
DOI
Venue
2005
10.1109/ICASSP.2005.1416437
ICASSP (5)
Keywords
Field
DocType
molecular imaging signal processing,genetic expression,diseases,molecular probes,biomedical optical imaging,light emitting tracers,living organism cellular events,genetic information imaging,disease early detection,fluorescence,bioluminescence,bioluminescence labels,biomedical imaging,fluorescence microscopy,diagnostic imaging tools,in vivo optical molecular imaging,medical image processing,fluorescence labels,diagnostic imaging,molecular imaging,molecular probe,stimulated emission,in vivo imaging,optical imaging,in vivo,signal processing,genetics
Biomedical engineering,Molecular probe,Signal processing,Molecular imaging,Imaging technology,Pattern recognition,Computer science,Medical imaging,In vivo,Bioluminescence,Artificial intelligence,Preclinical imaging
Conference
Volume
ISSN
ISBN
5
1520-6149
0-7803-8874-7
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.63
2
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jong Chul Ye171579.99
Kevin J. Webb2196.69
Rick P. Millane344.83
Charles A. Bouman42740473.62