Fourier Transform and Its Medical Application
Fourier Transform and Its Medical Application
Fourier Transform
Fourier Transform
Fourier Transform
Integral transform
a particular kind of mathematical
operator (a symbol or function
representing a mathematical operation)
any transform T of the following form:
Output function Tf
Input function f
Integral transform
Motivation
manipulating and solving the equation in
the target domain can be much easier than
manipulation and solution in the original
domain.
The solution is then mapped back to the
original domain with the inverse of the
integral transform.
<source>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_transform
Integral transform
Transform
Symbol
t1
Fourier
transform
Laplace
transform
<source>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_transform
t2
K-1
u1
u2
Laplace Transform
F ( s) f (t )e st dt
Differential Equation
L[ f (t )] F ( s )
Transform differential
equation to
algebraic equation.
L1[ F (s)] f (t )
Solve equation
by algebra.
Determine
inverse
transform.
Solution
Pierre-Simon, marquis
de Laplace (1749-1827)
French Astronomer and
Mathematician
Laplace Transform
Common Transform Pairs
f (t )
1 or u (t )
F ( s ) (1)e st dt
0
F ( s)
e 1
e
s 0
s
st
e t
sin t
F ( s ) L[ f (t )]
1
s
1
s
s 2
2
cos t
f (t ) e
e t sin t
F ( s ) e t e st dt e ( s )t dt
e ( s )t
e 0
0
( s ) 0
( s )
1
s
e t cos t
t
tn
e t t n
(t )
s
s2 2
(s )2 2
s
(s )2 2
1
s2
n!
s n1
n!
( s ) n 1
1
Laplace Transform
Laplace Transform Operations
f (t )
f '(t )
t
0
f (t )dt
F (s)
sF ( s ) f (0)
F (s)
s
F (s )
et f (t )
f (t T )u (t T )
f (0)
e sT F (s)
lim sF (s)
lim f (t )
lim sF ( s)*
s
s 0
Laplace Transform
Ex) Solve a differential equation shown below.
Sol)
d2y
dy
3
2 y 24
2
dt
dt
s( s 2 3s 2) s 2 3s 2
24
10 s 30
s( s 1)( s 2) ( s 1)( s 2)
Y ( s)
YF (s)
12
4
2
s s 1 s 2
yf (t ) 12 4et
2e2t
24
s
Laplace Transform
Ex) Solve a differential equation shown below.
Sol)
d2y
dy
2
5 y 20
2
dt
dt
s 2Y (s) 0 10 2 sY (s) 0 5Y ( s)
Y ( s)
20
s
20
10
s( s 2 2s 5) s 2 2s 5
Y ( s)
4
4s 8
10
4
4s 2
2
2
2
s s 2 s 5 s 2 s 5 s s 2s 5
Y ( s)
4
4( s 1)
3(2)
Fourier Series
Harmonic Analysis :
sine(:harmonics) .
Fundamental
Harmonics
V, I
t
A constant, DC waveform
where t : time,
: frequency,
A : amplitude,
: phase angle
A
- /
-A
t
T = 1/f
= 2/
Harmonics Analysis
N=1
N=3
N=7
N=19
Reconstructed waveform
N=79
: fundamental frequency
: harmonics
Fourier Series
Example Problem
MATLAB Implementation
Example Problem
Relationship to trigonometry :
Eulers identities:
Meaning of the
negative frequencies?
It requires only
one integration.
Example Problem
Fourier Transform
Fourier Series
T,
0=2/T 0,
m0
Fourier Series
Fourier Transform
Fourier Transform
Fourier Integral or Fourier Transform;
Used to decompose a continuous aperiodic signal into its
constituent frequency components.
Example Problem
Properties of
the Fourier Transform
Linearity
Time Shifting / Delay
Frequency Shifting
Convolution theorem
Extended Symmetry
t
Fourier Series
t
Discrete Time Fourier Transform
t
Fourier Transform
t
Discrete Fourier Transform
Biosignal Representation
Time vs Frequency
biosignals
power spectrum
Biosignal Representation
The occipital EEG recorded
while subject having eyes
closed shows high intensity
in the alpha band (7-13 Hz).
Spectrogram :
a time-varying spectral
representation(forming
an image) that shows
how the spectral
density of a signal
varies with time
Signal Filtering
Filtering : remove unwanted frequency components
Low-Pass, High-Pass, Band-Pass, Band-Stop
via Hardware and/or Software
Low-pass Filter
Band-pass Filter
Notch Filter
HRV Examples
Heart rhythm
of a healthy 30-year-old male driving car and
then hiking uphill.
Heart rhythm
of a 44-year-old female with low heart rate variability while
suffering from headaches and pounding sensation in her head.
ECG after bandpass filtering and differentiation. ECG signal after squaring function.
Bandpass-filtered ECG.
2D Fourier Transform
Fourier transform can be generalized to
higher dimensions:
2D Fourier Transform
Allan M. Cormack
USA
Tufts University
Medford, MA, USA
1924 - 1998
dI n Idx
dI / dx n I
I I 0e x
I = I0e-x
I0
1 2 3 N-1 N
x
I = I0e-(1+2+3+N-1+N)x
i= ln(I0/I)/x
Reconstruction Problem
256
65281
c1,c2,c,3,.c256
C1
C2
C3
.
.
.
.
.
C65536
1
2
3
.
.
.
.
65536
fijq 1 fijq
cross section
g j fijq
i 1
16
+2
+2
10
12
14
11
-.5
Next
Iteration
11
+.5
7.5 8.5
2.5 3.5
11
11
-1.5
st
1 Iteration
7
1
+1.5
9
9
5
Radon Transform
Radon transform operator performs the line
integral of the 2-D image data along y
The function p(x) is the 1-D projection of f(x,y)
at an angle
Properties
The projections are periodic in with a period of 2
and symmetric; therefore, p(x) = p(-x)
The Radon transform leads to the projection or central
slice theorem through a 1-D or 2-D Fourier Transform.
The Radon transform domain data provide a sinogram.
Object
f(x,y)
p ( x ') R[ f ( x, y )]
where
x ' x1
Projection
0
x=x1
x ' cos
y ' sin
or
x cos
y sin
sin x
cos y
sin x '
cos y '
Projection Theorem
Relationship between the 2-D Fourier transform
of the object function f(x,y) and 1-D Fourier
transform of its Radon transform or the projection
data p(x).
P ( ) 1[ p ( x ')]
F ( cos , sin ) F ( x , y )
F ( , )
f(x,y)
inverse
2-D
transform
p(x)
1-D
transform
P()