Cheney M, Isaacson D, Newell J C, Simske S, Goble J
Department of Mathematical Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12180-3590.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12180-3590.
Int J Imaging Syst Technol. 1990 Summer;2(2):66-75. doi: 10.1002/ima.1850020203.
The inverse conductivity problem is the mathematical problem that must be solved in order for electrical impedance tomography systems to be able to make images. Here we show how this inverse conductivity problem is related to a number of other inverse problems. We then explain the workings of an algorithm that we have used to make images from electrical impedance data measured on the boundary of a circle in two dimensions. This algorithm is based on the method of least squares. It takes one step of a Newton's method, using a constant conductivity as an initial guess. Most of the calculations can therefore be done analytically. The resulting code is named NOSER, for Newton's One-Step Error Reconstructor. It provides a reconstruction with 496 degrees of freedom. The code does not reproduce the conductivity accurately (unless it differs very little from a constant), but it yields useful images. This is illustrated by images reconstructed from numerical and experimental data, including data from a human chest.
逆电导率问题是为使电阻抗断层成像系统能够生成图像而必须解决的数学问题。在此我们展示了这个逆电导率问题是如何与许多其他逆问题相关联的。然后我们解释一种算法的工作原理,我们使用该算法根据在二维圆边界上测量的电阻抗数据生成图像。该算法基于最小二乘法。它采用牛顿法的一步,以恒定电导率作为初始猜测。因此大多数计算都可以解析地完成。生成的代码名为NOSER,即牛顿一步误差重构器。它提供具有496个自由度的重构。该代码不能精确地重现电导率(除非它与常数相差很小),但它能生成有用的图像。从数值和实验数据(包括来自人体胸部的数据)重构的图像说明了这一点。