Search results for "Sensor"

showing 10 items of 4594 documents

Parallel Phase-Shifting Digital Holography Based on the Fractional Talbot Effect

2010

Digital holography allows us to record and process digitally the complex amplitude distribution associated to diffracted light beams and therefore has offered new possibilities for a variety of applications such as 3D microscopy, interferometry, or information security (see, for example, review [1]). In principle, phase-shifting techniques are the most efficient in terms of spatial resolution to record digital holograms [2]. However, a sequential acquisition of several interference patterns with different phase retardations of the reference beam is necessary, preventing dynamic measurements. Different techniques for time-resolved dynamic interferometry have been developed allowing one-shot …

Physicsbusiness.industryComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONHolographyHolographic interferometrylaw.inventionInterferometryOpticslawReference beamTalbot effectImage sensorbusinessImage resolutionDigital holography
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Multi-illumination single-holographic-exposure lensless Fresnel (MISHELF) microscopy using 4 channels

2021

MISHELF microscopy is generalized by considering 4 illumination/detection channels while retaining single-shot working principle, twin image mitigation and noise averaging. Proof of principle validation is included considering a resolution test target.

Physicsbusiness.industryNoise reductionResolution (electron density)ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONHolographyNoise (electronics)Ptychographylaw.inventionOpticslawMicroscopyImage sensorbusinessFresnel diffractionImaging and Applied Optics 2019 (COSI, IS, MATH, pcAOP)
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Brain structural alterations in Fabry disease: ROI-based and voxel-based analyses of diffusion tensor imaging parameters

2007

Physicscomputer.software_genremedicine.diseaseFabry diseaseSensory SystemsNuclear magnetic resonanceNeurologyVoxelPhysiology (medical)medicineNeurology (clinical)PsychologycomputerNeuroscienceDiffusion MRITractographyClinical Neurophysiology
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Quantum Sensors Assisted by Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking for Detecting Very Small Forces

2015

We propose a quantum-sensing scheme for measuring weak forces based on a symmetry-breaking adiabatic transition in the quantum Rabi model. We show that the system described by the Rabi Hamiltonian can serve as a sensor for extremely weak forces with sensitivity beyond the yoctonewton (yN) per sqrt (Hz) range. We propose an implementation of this sensing protocol using a single trapped ion. A major advantage of our scheme is that the force detection is performed by projective measurement of the population of the spin states at the end of the transition, instead of the far slower phonon number measurement used hitherto.

Physicseducation.field_of_studyPhononSpontaneous symmetry breakingPopulationQuantum sensorGeneral Physics and AstronomyWeak interaction01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmassymbols.namesakeQuantum mechanics0103 physical sciencessymbols010306 general physicseducationHamiltonian (quantum mechanics)Adiabatic processQuantumQCPhysical Review Applied
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Erhöhte Schwellen für die Detektion von Phasenunterschieden in musterinduzierten Flimmerfarben bei Patienten mit Glaukom

1994

BACKGROUND: Pattern-induced flicker-colors are subjective colors produced by rotating disks with black-and-white arcs. Changing the direction of rotation results in a different color. Small variations in the temporal sequence (phase differences) of the black-and-white pattern cause the colors to vary and can be perceived as color differences. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We investigated the thresholds for such phase differences in healthy (n = 11) and in glaucomatous (n = 19) eyes. Acuity and color vision were tested and in patients static visual field perimetry (Octopus G1) was carried out. The disks used for producing the pattern-induced flicker-colors were viewed from a distance of 2 m and had …

Physicsmedicine.medical_specialtyVisual acuitygenetic structuresColor visionbusiness.industryFlicker fusion thresholdRetinal ganglioneye diseasesVisual fieldOphthalmologyOpticsParvocellular cellSensory thresholdOphthalmologyFixation (visual)medicinemedicine.symptombusinessKlinische Monatsblätter für Augenheilkunde
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Spectral imaging system for money counterfeit detection

2019

A prototype with three different wavelength lasers (448nm, 532nm and 659nm) for money counterfeit illumination, analyzation and detection using RGB crosstalk correction and comparing spectral image ration for different banknote elements will be presented.

Physicsmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryLaserCounterfeitSpectral imaginglaw.inventionCrosstalkWavelengthOpticslawSpectral imagemedicineRGB color modelImage sensorbusinessImaging and Applied Optics 2019 (COSI, IS, MATH, pcAOP)
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Integrated optic surface plasmon resonance measurements in a borosilicate glass substrate

2008

The surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technique is a well-known optical method that can be used to measure the refractive index of organic nano-layers adsorbed on a thin metal film. Although there are many configurations for measuring biomolecular interactions, SPR-based techniques play a central role in many current biosensing experiments, since they are the most suited for sensitive and quantitative kinetic measurements. Here we give some results from the analysis and numerical elaboration of SPR data from integrated optics experiments in a particular borosilicate glass, chosen for its composition offering the rather low refractive index of 1.4701 at 633 nm wavelength. These data regard the…

Physics::OpticsSubstrate (electronics)Biosensors; Integrated Optics; Surface Plasmon Resonancelcsh:Chemical technologyBiochemistryArticleAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionOpticslawSurface plasmon resonancelcsh:TP1-1185Electrical and Electronic EngineeringSurface plasmon resonanceThin filmInstrumentationChemistrybusiness.industryBorosilicate glassIntegrated opticsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsWavelengthBiosensorsbusinessBiosensorRefractive indexWaveguideSensors
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General principles in motion vision: Color blindness of object motion depends on pattern velocity in honeybee and goldfish

2011

AbstractVisual systems can undergo striking adaptations to specific visual environments during evolution, but they can also be very “conservative.” This seems to be the case in motion vision, which is surprisingly similar in species as distant as honeybee and goldfish. In both visual systems, motion vision measured with the optomotor response is color blind and mediated by one photoreceptor type only. Here, we ask whether this is also the case if the moving stimulus is restricted to a small part of the visual field, and test what influence velocity may have on chromatic motion perception. Honeybees were trained to discriminate between clockwise- and counterclockwise-rotating sector disks. S…

PhysiologyColor visionMotion PerceptionColorColor Vision DefectsBiologyStimulus (physiology)Discrimination PsychologicalGoldfishAnimalsComputer visionCompound Eye ArthropodMotion perceptionChromatic scaleVision OcularCommunicationbusiness.industryCompound eyeBeesSensory SystemsVisual fieldPattern Recognition VisualColor Vision DefectsOptomotor responsePhotoreceptor Cells InvertebrateArtificial intelligencebusinessColor PerceptionPhotic StimulationPhotoreceptor Cells VertebrateVisual Neuroscience
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Effect of acetylcholine and dopamine iontophoretically applied on the sensory responsive caudate unit

1986

A putative integrative function of the striatum was evaluated through the study of the electrical activity of sensory responsive caudate neurones. Both nervous (radial nerve) and auditory stimulations were delivered in order to characterize populations of neurones affected by peripheral stimuli; the units were previously activated by iontophoretic glutamate. On these units the iontophoretic ejection of ACh and DA was tested. Experimental results demonstrated a prevalent excitatory effect of ACh, while DA appeared to exert a drastic decrease on firing rate. A comparison between peripheral stimuli and chemical substances was made. The result of such study showed a most important action of the…

PhysiologyDopamineCaudate nucleusStriatumBiologyInhibitory postsynaptic potentialBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundDopaminemedicineAnimalsNeurotransmitterNeuronsIontophoresisAcetylcholineElectric StimulationSensory neuronmedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationchemistryCatsExcitatory postsynaptic potentialCaudate NucleusNeuroscienceAcetylcholinemedicine.drugArchives Internationales de Physiologie et de Biochimie
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Lateralized memory storage and crossed inhibition during odor processing by Limax.

2000

After odor conditioning intact Limax maximus and injecting LY into their haemocoel, labeled groups of neurons are found in either the right or left procerebral lobe but never in both procerebral lobes. This suggests that a competitive interaction occurs between right and left odor processing pathways of which the procerebral lobe is a part. We use the nerve discharge in the external peritentacular nerve evoked by applying a puff of conditioned odor to the nose to document crossed inhibition between left and right odor processing pathways. Responses in the external peritentacular nerve evoked by stimulating one superior nose with a conditioned odor are strongly lateralized as responses occur…

PhysiologySensory systemStimulationInhibitory postsynaptic potentialFunctional LateralityBehavioral NeurosciencePostsynaptic potentialMemorymedicineAnimalsLearningEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyLimaxChemistryAnatomybiology.organism_classificationLobeSmellmedicine.anatomical_structureOdorMolluscaOdorantsLimax maximusConditioning OperantAnimal Science and ZoologyNeuroscienceJournal of comparative physiology. A, Sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology
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