24 July 2023 Synthetic white balancing for intra-operative hyperspectral imaging
Anisha Bahl, Conor C. Horgan, Mirek Janatka, Oscar J. MacCormac, Philip Noonan, Yijing Xie, Jianrong Qiu, Nicola Cavalcanti, Philipp Fürnstahl, Michael Ebner, Mads S. Bergholt, Jonathan Shapey, Tom Vercauteren
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Purpose

Hyperspectral imaging shows promise for surgical applications to non-invasively provide spatially resolved, spectral information. For calibration purposes, a white reference image of a highly reflective Lambertian surface should be obtained under the same imaging conditions. Standard white references are not sterilizable and so are unsuitable for surgical environments. We demonstrate the necessity for in situ white references and address this by proposing a novel, sterile, synthetic reference construction algorithm.

Approach

The use of references obtained at different distances and lighting conditions to the subject were examined. Spectral and color reconstructions were compared with standard measurements qualitatively and quantitatively, using ΔE and normalized RMSE, respectively. The algorithm forms a composite image from a video of a standard sterile ruler, whose imperfect reflectivity is compensated for. The reference is modeled as the product of independent spatial and spectral components, and a scalar factor accounting for gain, exposure, and light intensity. Evaluation of synthetic references against ideal but non-sterile references is performed using the same metrics alongside pixel-by-pixel errors. Finally, intraoperative integration is assessed though cadaveric experiments.

Results

Improper white balancing leads to increases in all quantitative and qualitative errors. Synthetic references achieve median pixel-by-pixel errors lower than 6.5% and produce similar reconstructions and errors to an ideal reference. The algorithm integrated well into surgical workflow, achieving median pixel-by-pixel errors of 4.77% while maintaining good spectral and color reconstruction.

Conclusions

We demonstrate the importance of in situ white referencing and present a novel synthetic referencing algorithm. This algorithm is suitable for surgery while maintaining the quality of classical data reconstruction.

© 2023 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Anisha Bahl, Conor C. Horgan, Mirek Janatka, Oscar J. MacCormac, Philip Noonan, Yijing Xie, Jianrong Qiu, Nicola Cavalcanti, Philipp Fürnstahl, Michael Ebner, Mads S. Bergholt, Jonathan Shapey, and Tom Vercauteren "Synthetic white balancing for intra-operative hyperspectral imaging," Journal of Medical Imaging 10(4), 046001 (24 July 2023). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JMI.10.4.046001
Received: 9 January 2023; Accepted: 5 July 2023; Published: 24 July 2023
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CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Hyperspectral imaging

Vignetting

Light sources

Video

Cameras

Light sources and illumination

Reconstruction algorithms

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