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The speckle statistics of optical coherence tomography images of biological tissue have been studied using several historical probability density functions. A recent hypothesis implies that underlying power-law distributions in the medium structure, such as the fractal branching vasculature, will contribute to power-law probability distributions of speckle statistics. Specifically, these are the Burr type XII distribution for speckle amplitude, the Lomax distribution for intensity, and the generalized logistic distribution for log amplitude. In this study, these three distributions are fitted to histogram data from nine optical coherence tomography scans of various biological tissues and samples. The distributions are also compared with conventional distributions such as the Rayleigh, K, and gamma distributions. The results indicate that these newer distributions based on power laws are, in general, more appropriate models and support the plausibility of their use for characterizing biological tissue. Potentially, the governing power-law parameter of these distributions could be used as a biomarker for tissue disease or pathology.
Histological images are critical in the diagnosis and treatment of cancers. Unfortunately, the current method for capturing these microscopy images require resource intensive tissue preparation that delays diagnosis for many days to a few weeks. To s
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a widely used imaging technique in the micrometer regime, which gained accelerating interest in medical imaging %and material testing in the last twenty years. In up-to-date OCT literature [5,6] certain simplifyi
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Tissue biopsy evaluation in the clinic is in need of quantitative disease markers for diagnosis and, most importantly, prognosis. Among the new technologies, quantitative phase imaging (QPI) has demonstrated promise for histopathology because it reve
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a powerful biomedical imaging technology that relies on the coherent detection of backscattered light to image tissue morphology in vivo. As a consequence, OCT is susceptible to coherent noise (speckle noise), wh