Time-domain spectral-element ultrasound waveform tomography using a stochastic quasi-Newton method

Conference Paper (2018)
Author(s)

Christian Boehm (ETH Zürich)

Naiara Korta Martiartu (ETH Zürich)

Nicolas Vinard (ETH Zürich, TU Delft - Civil Engineering & Geosciences)

Ivana Jovanovic Balic (SonoView Acoustic Sensing Technologies)

Andreas Fichtner (ETH Zürich)

Research Group
Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2293299 Final published version
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Research Group
Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics
Volume number
10580
Article number
105800H
ISBN (electronic)
9781510616493
Event
Medical Imaging 2018: Ultrasonic Imaging and Tomography (2018-02-10 - 2018-02-15), Houston, United States
Downloads counter
169

Abstract

Waveform inversion for ultrasound computed tomography (USCT) is a promising imaging technique for breast cancer screening. However, the improved spatial resolution and the ability to constrain multiple parameters simultaneously demand substantial computational resources for the recurring simulations of the wave equation. Hence, it is crucial to use fast and accurate methods for numerical wave propagation, on the one hand, and to keep the number of required simulations as small as possible, on the other hand. We present an efficient strategy for acoustic waveform inversion that combines (i) a spectral-element continuous Galerkin method for solving the wave equation, (ii) conforming hexahedral mesh generation to discretize the scanning device, (iii) a randomized descent method based on mini-batches to reduce the computational cost for misfit and gradient computations, and (iv) a trust-region method using a quasi-Newton approximation of the Hessian to iteratively solve the inverse problem. This approach combines ideas and state-of-the-art methods from global-scale seismology, large-scale nonlinear optimization, and machine learning. Numerical examples for a synthetic phantom demonstrate the efficiency of the discretization, the effectiveness of the mini-batch approximation and the robustness of the trust-region method to reconstruct the acoustic properties of breast tissue with partial information.