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Estimating acoustic attenuation from reflected ultrasound signals: Comparison of spectral-shift and spectral-difference approaches
110
Citations
13
References
1984
Year
Biomedical AcousticsMedical UltrasoundAcoustic AttenuationData Window SizeEngineeringBiological Effects Of Acoustic WavesBiomedical EngineeringBiomedical Signal AnalysisPower UltrasoundPhysical AcousticNoiseUltrasound Contrast AgentsUltrasound SignalsAcoustical EngineeringAcoustic Signal ProcessingSoft Biological TissueAcoustic AnalysisSpectral-difference ApproachesRadiologyHealth SciencesAcoustic MethodsMedical ImagingUltrasonicsAcoustic Attenuation CoefficientAcoustic PropagationUltrasoundSignal ProcessingBiomedical ImagingElastographyDiagnostic Acoustics
The acoustic attenuation coefficient of soft biological tissue has been observed to have an increasing linear-with-frequency attenuation characteristic with a slope, denoted by β, that varies with the disease condition of the liver. Hence, it would be diagnostically useful to estimate the value of β from reflected ultrasound signals. Two approaches for estimating β are examined: the spectral-shift approach, which estimates β from the downward shift experienced by the propagating pulse spectrum with penetration into the liver, and the spectral-difference approach, which estimates β from the slope of the log spectral differences. While the spectral-shift approach requires the propagating pulse to have a Gaussian-shaped spectrum, the spectral-difference method does not require a specific spectral form. A mathematical model is developed to simulate the random ultrasound signals reflected from the liver. The bias and variance properties of the β estimators are determined by using the simulated signals and compared as a function of the data window size. The results indicate that, while the accuracy of both approaches is equivalent for large data windows, the frequency-shift approach is more accurate than the spectral-difference approach for most practical cases.
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