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A novel computational, non-iterative and noise-robust reconstruction method is introduced for the planar anisotropic inverse conductivity problem. The method is based on bypassing the unstable step of the reconstruction of the values of the isothermal coordinates on the boundary of the domain. Non-uniqueness of the inverse problem is dealt with by recovering the unique isotropic conductivity that can be achieved as a deformation of the measured anisotropic conductivity by emph{isothermal coordinates}. The method shows how isotropic D-bar reconstruction methods have produced reasonable and informative reconstructions even when used on EIT data known to come from anisotropic media, and when the boundary shape is not known precisely. Furthermore, the results pave the way for regularized anisotropic EIT. Key aspects of the approach involve D-bar methods and inverse scattering theory, complex geometrical optics solutions, and quasi-conformal mapping techniques.
The paper surveys recent progress in establishing uniqueness and developing inversion formulas and algorithms for the thermoacoustic tomography. In mathematical terms, one deals with a rather special inverse problem for the wave equation. In the case
In Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT), the internal conductivity of a body is recovered via current and voltage measurements taken at its surface. The reconstruction task is a highly ill-posed nonlinear inverse problem, which is very sensitive to
A method for including a priori information in the 2-D D-bar algorithm is presented. Two methods of assigning conductivity values to the prior are presented, each corresponding to a different scenario on applications. The method is tested on several
A high accuracy and high sensitivity system architecture is proposed for the read-out circuit of electrical impedance tomography system-on-chip. The switched ratiometric technique is applied in the proposed architecture. The proposed system architect
We propose a variational form of the BDF2 method as an alternative to the commonly used minimizing movement scheme for the time-discrete approximation of gradient flows in abstract metric spaces. Assuming uniform semi-convexity --- but no smoothness