来源:精密光谱科学与技术国家重点实验室

Optical imaging and focusing inside scattering biological tissues

来源:精密光谱科学与技术国家重点实验室发布时间:2016-10-10浏览次数:214

讲座题目: Optical imaging and focusing inside scattering biological tissues

主讲人:Dr. Cheng Ma

主持人:张诗按研究员

讲座时间:20161013上午1000

讲座地点:理科大楼A814

报告人简介:

Cheng Ma received his B.S. degree in Electronic Engineering from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China in 2004.  He obtained his Ph. D. degree in Electrical Engineering from Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia in 2012. His graduate research focused on developing spectral interferometry, absorption spectroscopy, and optomechanical devices for novel sensing applications. From 2012 to 2016, he was a postdoctoral research associate in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Washington University in St Louis, St. Louis, Missouri. His postdoctoral research focused on noninvasive high-resolution deep-tissue optical imaging and light delivery using photoacoustic computed tomography and wavefront shaping.  From May 2016 to present, Dr. Ma is an assistant professor in the Department of Electronic Engineering at Tsinghua University. His current research interests include light control in complex media, photon-phonon interaction, photoacoustic imaging, adaptive wavefront control, deep-tissue optical imaging, therapy, and optogenetics. Dr. Ma has published twenty-three papers in peer-reviewed journals, including Nature PhotonicsNature CommunicationsOptica and Scientific Reports. As a research associate, Dr. Ma served as the co-PI on a project funded by the National Science Foundation.

报告摘要:

Biomedical optical imaging offers rich structural, molecular and functional contrasts, and is emerging as a powerful pre-clinical and clinical tool. However, due to light scattering, conventional optical imaging modalities are limited to shallow regions of about 1 mm within biological tissues, significantly limiting their widespread application. To overcome this optical diffusion limit, we developed two technologies that allow deep light penetration: photoacoustic computed tomography (PACT) and optical wavefront shaping (WFS). In this talk, I will introduce the basic principles of PACT and WFS, present some of our latest results, and discuss future challenges and opportunities.